How
do coyotes thrive in urban Southern California? The answer is not for
the weak-stomached

Danielle Martinez donned a lab coat, pulled on a pair of latex gloves
and adjusted her safety goggles in preparation for one of biology's
little surprises.

"They're like Christmas packages," she said of the cantaloupe-sized
coyote stomachs before her. "You never know what you're going to find
inside."

Martinez is part of a team of researchers that for more than a year
has been cataloging the astonishingly diverse contents stewing in the
bellies of local urban coyotes.

Organs from coyotes that perished across Los Angeles and Orange counties
under myriad circumstances are offering fresh glimpses of a biological
mystery: Exactly what fits into the diet of the intelligent, socially
organized and highly adaptive scavengers in urban settings? More

California
store sued over no-Spanish language policy

SAN DIEGO — Federal officials say an Albertsons grocery store in San
Diego subjected Hispanic employees to harassment and a hostile work
environment by implementing a no-Spanish language policy.

The store allegedly barred workers from speaking Spanish around non-Spanish
speakers even during breaks or when talking to Spanish-speaking customers.
More

The
homeless Disneyland worker who died alone in her car

For seven years, Yeweinishet “Weini” Mesfin lived out of her Honda Civic.

A night janitor at Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, Mesfin decided not
to tell family and coworkers that she was homeless, outside of one or
two people.

When she died, barely a week after her birthday, she was alone in that
same car — a 61-year-old woman, worn out, suffering from heart problems.

A victim of her own secrecy, nobody in her life could be there to
help her. Relatives and friends began a frantic search when she failed
to show up at work on Nov. 29, 2016, or get in contact.

Because they had no clue where to look, it took 20 days to discover
Mesfin, dressed in exercise clothes and clutching her keys, in the driver’s
seat of her dark green 1999 sedan parked at the gym where she showered.
More

More
than a million illicit residents have received California driver's licenses

More than 1 million undocumented immigrants have received driver's licenses,
the California Department of Motor Vehicles announced Wednesday.

Assembly Bill 60, authored by then-Assemblyman Luis Alejo in 2013,
required California DMV offices to issue driver's licenses to undocumented
immigrants as long as they can prove their identity and residence within
the state. The law has led to 1,001,000 undocumented immigrants receiving
licenses as of March 31 but doesn't give the licensees carte blanche
to drive outside of California or fly across state or federal borders.More

California
Would Require Twitter, Facebook to Disclose Bots

California has proposed legislation that would require social platforms
like Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. to identify automated accounts,
or bots, amid a push by state lawmakers to police the technology companies
that have proven vulnerable to manipulation and the spread of fake news.

Bots, which can be purchased or created by individuals or organizations,
have been used to inflate influence or amplify divisive opinions in
politics and national tragedies. In the recent shooting at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School, for example, bots with suspected links to Russia
released hundreds of posts to weigh in on the gun control debate.

Russia-linked bots on Twitter shared Donald Trump’s tweets almost
half a million times during the final months of the 2016 election campaign,
compared with fewer than 50,000 retweets for Hillary Clinton’s account.
More

Trump
administration picks new fight with California

The Trump administration is picking a new fight with California, this
time over global warming and emissions standards for cars.

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Scott Pruitt is
expected this week to declare that having the nation’s auto fleet meet
an average 54.5 mpg standard by 2025 is too strict, two people familiar
with the matter confirmed to The Hill.

The decision could have huge ramifications for California, which negotiated
the target with the Obama administration in 2011 after winning a waiver
from the Clean Air Act to impose its own in-state fuel economy standards.
More

California
sues Trump administration over Census citizenship question

California filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration Tuesday
for adding a citizenship question to the 2020 Census, the latest volley
in a feud between Sacramento and Washington over federal immigration
policies.

The Commerce Department announced late Monday that it would resume
the long-abandoned practice of asking about citizenship during the Census,
taken every 10 years. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said that information
is needed to enforce the Voting Rights Act, which protects minority
voters.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who filed the lawsuit,
and others argue that asking people whether they are citizens is not
only unconstitutional, but also would intimidate immigrants — both legal
and illegal — and result in a dramatic undercount of minority communities.
More

Invasive
20-pound rodents increasingly burrowing into California

A giant invasive rodent with the ability to destroy roads, levees and
wetlands has been discovered in Stanislaus County.

Weighing in at 20 pounds and measuring 2 feet, 6 inches long, plus
a 12-inch tail, the nutria live in or near water. They're also incredibly
destructive.

When nutria aren’t burrowing, they’re eating. They can consume 25
percent of their body weight each day in vegetation, but they waste
and destroy 10 times that. More

California
DMV disengagement report reveals self-driving improvements

California’s Department of Motor Vehicles releases an annual report
detailing the number of disengagements reported by companies it has
licensed to test autonomous vehicles on public roads in the state. This
year, the report reveals some interesting details about the progress
of some of those companies, including Waymo, GM’s Cruise and Tesla (sort
of – you’ll see what I mean).

Cruise’s numbers were very positive, relatively speaking. The company’s
reported around a 1400% improvement in performance, with the number
of average miles between disengagements climbing from around 300 miles
between each to aver 4,600. More

Ian Calderon wants restaurateurs to think long and hard before giving
you a straw.

Calderon, the Democratic majority leader in California's lower house,
has introduced a bill to stop sit-down restaurants from offering customers
straws with their beverages unless they specifically request one.

Under Calderon's law, a waiter who serves a drink with an unrequested
straw in it would face up to 6 months in jail and a fine of up to $1,000.

"We need to create awareness around the issue of one-time use plastic
straws and its detrimental effects on our landfills, waterways, and
oceans," Calderon explained in a press release. More

California's
Other Drought: A Major Earthquake Is Overdue

California earthquakes are a geologic inevitability. The state straddles
the North American and Pacific tectonic plates and is crisscrossed by
the San Andreas and other active fault systems.

The magnitude 7.9 earthquake that struck off Alaska's Kodiak Island
on Jan. 23, 2018 was just the latest reminder of major seismic activity
along the Pacific Rim.

Tragic quakes that occurred in 2017 near the Iran-Iraq border and in
central Mexico, with magnitudes of 7.3 and 7.1, respectively, are well
within the range of earthquake sizes that have a high likelihood of
occurring in highly populated parts of California during the next few
decades.

The earthquake situation in California is actually more dire than
people who aren't seismologists like myself may realize. Although many
Californians can recount experiencing an earthquake, most have never
personally experienced a strong one. For major events, with magnitudes
of 7 or greater, California is actually in an earthquake droughtMore

California
AG: Employers who Cooperate With Federal Immigration Raids Will be Prosecuted

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (D-CA) said during a press
conference Thursday that employers in California who cooperate with
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in their rumored upcoming
immigration raids would be prosecuted if they cooperate in a manner
that violates California law. Becerra held the press conference following
reports that ICE officials are “preparing for a major sweep in San Francisco
and other Northern California cities.”

The Sacramento Bee’s Angela Hart asked Becerra if the attorney general’s
office would take legal action against employers who cooperate with
ICE officials.

“There are new laws in place in California now in 2018 with the advent
of 2018. I mentioned two of them specifically, AB 450 and SB 54. AB
450 in particular deals with the workplace in particular and how we
go about treating the information about the workplace and employees
at the workplace by employers,” Becerra explained. “What we’re trying
to make sure is that employers are aware that in 2018, there is a new
law in place.” More

Thomas
fire, California's largest on record, finally 100% contained

The Thomas fire, the largest wildfire on record in California and the
trigger point for this week’s deadly mudslides in Montecito, was declared
100% contained Friday.

The fire burned for more than a month, though its spread was contained
several weeks ago. Heavy rains earlier this week, which caused land
burned by the fire to create mudflows that buried neighborhoods, helped
fully extinguish the blaze. In the end, the fire burned 281,893 acres.

The fire eclipsed the 2003 Cedar fire in San Diego County, which burned
273,246 acres. More

2018’s
new laws: California businesses brace for changes

A slew of new laws that address unpaid parental leave, new hiring restrictions
and other workplace issues will have an impact on California businesses
in the coming year.

The California Chamber of Commerce has released a list of the laws
that are scheduled to take effect in 2018 or beyond.

Some are far-reaching, while others make small changes to portions
of existing laws or may affect employers only in specific industries.
Senate Bill 63, also known as the New Parent Leave Act, requires small
businesses with 20 or more employees to provide eligible employees up
to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave to bond with a new child
— leave that must be taken within a year of the child’s birth, adoption
or foster care placement. More

Man
begging for gas money in Santa Ana found with stolen $265,000 Ferrari

SANTA ANA – A man begging for gas money for a $265,000 Ferrari was arrested
on suspicion of stealing the luxury vehicle and taking it on a two-week
joyride, authorities said Wednesday, Nov. 29.

Israel Perez Rangel, 38, was being held in the Orange County jail
on suspicion of vehicle theft and grand theft auto with prior convictions
and vandalism causing damages of $10,000 or more.

Rangel is suspected of stealing a 2015 Ferrari 458 from Ferrari &
Maserati of Newport Beach Service Center in Costa Mesa on Wednesday,
Oct. 18, said Michelle Van Der Linden, spokeswoman for the Orange County
District Attorney’s Office.

The keys had been left in the vehicle, which the District Attorney’s
Office valued at $265,000, and the theft was reported to Costa Mesa
police the next day. More

2
women harassed her for breastfeeding at Disneyland, so she took a photo
with them

A woman’s photo of herself breastfeeding her 10-month-old son at Disneyland
has gone viral, with more than 1,100 shares on Facebook.

In a Nov. 18 post to the Facebook group “Breastfeeding Mama Talk,”
Brittni Medina wrote that her husband was prompted to snap the photo
after two woman grew angry at her for breastfeeding her son while waiting
in line for a ride. The women are visible in the background of the photo.
It is legal to breastfeed in public in California.

“These women were making snarky comments so I moved from my spot to
catch a picture with these characters,” Medina wrote in her Facebook
post. More

31
Christmas and holiday things to do in Southern California

Dust off your jingle bells and get ready for the parades, light displays
and holiday happenings that only appear this time of the year.

We picked some of the biggest and best attractions and events in Los
Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties worth
checking out whether you have out-of-towners coming to visit or need
an idea to get the kids out of the house.

Our list is organized by county and then by date, starting with attractions
that are already open for the season. More

Antonio
Villaraigosa made more than $1 million annually from consulting, tax
returns show

Former
Los Angeles mayor and governor hopeful Antonio Villaraigosa saw his
income soar in the years after he left the mayor’s office, thanks to
big consulting contracts with companies like Herbalife and Cadiz, according
to tax returns released by his campaign on Tuesday. No compatible source
was found for this video.

Villaraigosa made an average total income of $893,883 per year between
2011 and 2016, and paid an average combined state and federal tax bill
of $362,201 per year, for an average combined tax rate of about 40 percent
— or 44 percent after deductions and credits. He’s the last of the four
Democrats in the 2018 governor’s race to release six years of returns.
More

Californians
will turn private ranch land into new public beach

LOS ANGELES — The California Coastal Commission on Thursday agreed to
carve a mile of public beach out of ranch land that has been in private
hands for more than a century.

The commission, which oversees coastal development, unanimously approved
a deal that calls for the owners to fix damage to land they developed
without permission and to transfer 36 acres of coastal property to Santa
Barbara County. It will be used to extend a current public park at remote
Jalama Beach, 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

The area is a rarity on the 21st-century central and southern coast
of California — free of urban sprawl, crowds, cookie-cutter developments
and freeways. More

Alameda
schools did nothing about anti-Semitism, family says

ALAMEDA — Natasha Waldorf was a freshman at Alameda High School last
year when she received a text as she sat in class that called her a
“big-nosed kike.”

An image of the advertising logo Mr. Clean in a Nazi uniform with “Mr.
Ethnic Cleansing” added in bright red letters also appeared on the 14-year-old’s
phone. Natasha, who is Jewish, was told in another text that Hitler’s
biggest mistake was not killing her family. The texts were allegedly
sent by fellow students.

“Telling a Jew that her family should have been killed in the Holocaust
is like telling a black student that her family should have been lynched,”
said Natasha, now a sophomore at the school. “It’s a very clear threat,
and I can tell you it instills very real fear.” More

Pending
home sales plunge across Bay Area and state

Pending home sales fell markedly across California in September, with
the largest regional drop-off in the Bay Area where an ongoing housing
shortage and exorbitant prices appeared to dissuade some potential buyers.

That’s according to a new survey by the California Association of
Realtors, which examines pending sales as a bellwether for where the
housing market is headed. It didn’t provide data on closed home sales.

“After a solid run-up of closed sales in May, June and August,” the
report said, “continued housing inventory issues and affordability constraints
may have pushed the market to a tipping point, suggesting the pace of
growth will slow in the fall.” More

California
cops injured in Las Vegas mass shooting heroism denied workers’ comp
due to state law

As bullets rained down on a Las Vegas concert crowd this month, killing
dozens, many of the 200-plus Southern California police officers attending
the festival shifted instantly into law-enforcement mode.

They sprang to action – shepherding people to safety, performing CPR
and helping local authorities secure the area – sometimes getting gunshot
wounds or injuries in the process.

But as those wounded officers have begun filing for public-employee
benefits to cover the long-term medical care some might need to recover
from the trauma, local cities and counties are asking themselves whether
they’re required or even allowed to pay to treat off-duty police who
chose independently to intervene in an out-of-state emergency. And due
to some muddy language in California’s labor code, it’s unclear whether
the municipalities will have to pony up. More

California
Considers Following China With Combustion-Engine Car Ban

The internal combustion engine’s days may be numbered in California,
where officials are mulling whether a ban on sales of polluting autos
is needed to achieve long-term targets for cleaner air.

Governor Jerry Brown has expressed an interest in barring the sale
of vehicles powered by internal-combustion engines, Mary Nichols, chairman
of the California Air Resources Board, said in an interview Friday at
Bloomberg headquarters in New York. The earliest such a ban is at least
a decade away, she said.

Brown, one of the most outspoken elected official in the U.S. about
the need for policies to combat climate change, would be replicating
similar moves by China, France and the U.K. More

California
Is Already Preparing for a North Korean Nuclear Attack

With U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
trading insults and threatening war, California officials are taking
the threat of nuclear exchange seriously.

Noting the heightened North Korean threat, the Los Angeles-area Joint
Regional Intelligence Center issued a bulletin last month warning that
a nuclear attack on Southern California would be “catastrophic” and
urged officials in the region to shore up their nuclear attack response
plans.

The report cites North Korea’s late July test of an intercontinental
ballistic missile that could, in theory, reach the West Coast of the
United States. “North Korea’s propaganda videos feature ruins of San
Francisco and Washington,” the document says. More

Effort
to bar child marriage in California runs into opposition

A Bay Area legislator was shocked when he learned from a young constituent
that while Californians cannot legally consent to sex until they are
18, they can — with the permission of a parent and a judge’s order —
get married at any age, even if their spouse is many years older.

“I thought, that can’t be true in California,” said state Sen. Jerry
Hill, a Democrat from San Mateo. “We found that it is true in California
and true in many states throughout the country.”

But Hill’s resulting proposal to bar juveniles from getting hitched
has been watered down after it prompted strong objections from civil
rights groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union.As the emotional
fight unfolds in Sacramento, there’s no agreement even about a basic
piece of information — how many minors get married each year in California.
More

Yvette Felarca, the controversial Berkeley middle school teacher who
frequently marches and protests against groups she considers to be fascistic,
was arrested Tuesday night in connection with a violent neo-Nazi rally
in Sacramento in June 2016.

Police took Felarca, 47, into custody in Southern California on charges
of assault by means of force likely to inflict great bodily injury,
a felony, and participating in a riot, and inciting a riot, both misdemeanors,
according to information provided by the Sacramento County District
Attorney’s office.

Felarca was captured on video hitting a member of the Traditionalist
Worker’s Party, a white nationalist group that had taken out permits
for a rally on the west steps of the state capitol. More

Gender
'X' could soon be an option on California state IDs

California could become the U.S. state with the most fluid definition
of gender on its official state IDs if a bill making its way through
the legislature becomes law.

The California Senate has already passed SB179, which would introduce
a third gender option for state identification. Currently, driver’s
licenses and other forms of official identification only contain options
for male or female. The bill would allow a third option, which would
likely be ‘X,’ according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

The bill allowing people to identify as “nonbinary” will be considered
in the California Assembly. It would also make it easier for transgender
people to make sure legal state documents appropriately reflect their
gender. More

When
the Civil War Came to San Diego

Union troops were more than a little suspicious when they ran into a
group of 16 men traveling east through San Diego’s backcountry in the
early days of the Civil War. The men declared they were peaceful miners,
but they each packed a rifle and a pair of revolvers instead of shovels
and picks.

Most of them were Southerners, and their leader, a red-headed Confederate
sympathizer named Dan Showalter, was famous. A few months earlier, this
“fascinating and baffling character” had fired a bullet straight into
a fellow state legislator’s mouth at 40 paces. Now, he was heading east
to slaughter Yankees. More

Cancer-Causing
Chemical TCP Plagues California Drinking Water

ARVIN, Calif. — In the Central Valley of California, hundreds of wells
that provide water to a million people are tainted with a chemical that
some experts say is one of the most powerful cancer-causing agents in
the world.

The state is poised to take the first step Tuesday to regulate the
substance — called 1,2,3, TCP — but test data compiled by an activist
group show it's also been detected by utilities across the country.

Some who live in this lush farmland believe it's to blame for the
health problems of their family members and neighbors.

"The word that really captures all of it is 'outrage,'" said Jerry
Tinoco, 45, who is from the city of Arvin and says at least three close
family members have been diagnosed with cancer. "It's a man-made chemical,
so someone is to blame." More

More
than a third of California households have virtually no savings, are
at risk of financial ruin

More than 37 percent of California households have so little cash saved
that they couldn’t live at the poverty level for even three months if
they lost a job or suffered another significant loss of income.

That’s the grim assessment of the 2017 Prosperity Now Scorecard. The
report was compiled by Prosperity Now, a Washington, D.C.-based organization
seeking to help people — particularly people of color and those with
limited income — achieve financial security and prosperity.

The scorecard also shows that 46 percent of households in the Golden
State didn’t set aside any savings for emergencies over the past year,
a higher percentage than the national rate of 44 percent. More

California
man sues over denial of $5M lottery prize

LONG BEACH, Calif. — A man who was denied a $5 million lottery jackpot
because his teenage son bought the ticket is suing the California Lottery
Commission.

Ward Thomas of Long Beach says he sent his son to buy Scratchers tickets
from a gas station in October.

One was a winner.

Thomas says he validated the ticket at a lottery office but two months
later, the prize was denied because his son was 16 and only adults can
play.

Thomas filed a lawsuit last week against the commission and the gas
station, which he claims didn't check the boy's age or tell him only
adults could buy tickets. More

Why
people love to hate Californians

Californians
have always had quite a reputation, whether it's for our liberal politics
or easy-going West Coast ways, but California has established itself
even more as the free-spirited stepchild of the United States since
Donald Trump was elected.

The Trump election was a reminder to many in the Bay Area of what
a bubble we live in, and how different things can be in the Golden State.
The president himself called California "out of control" earlier this
year, joining the chorus of those lamenting California's idiosyncrasies.
We wouldn't be surprised if today there are even more in the far-right
aghast with California. More

California
May Place ‘Third Gender’ Option on State Documents

SACRAMENTO — In a significant milestone for transgender rights, California
legislators on Thursday introduced a bill that would make the Golden
State the first in the nation to create a third gender marker on its
driver’s licenses, birth certificates and state IDs.

The Gender Recognition Act of 2017 would add “non-binary” to male
and female on official state documents and make it easier for transgender
people to change them.

The proposed legislation is another example of California’s growing
culture clash with the Republican-controlled Congress and many of the
nation’s red states, which are embroiled in an emotional debate over
gender politics. More

Skiers in bikini tops are showing up on California mountain slopes that
could remain open into August. Hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail must
cross miles of deep snowfields that should have melted a month ago,
some of them scrambling for their lives in the icy water of raging mountain
streams.

For Stev Fagran, a 56-year-old schoolteacher from Wellington, Nev.,
the Sierra’s endless winter gives him a chance to build on a personal
record of 164 consecutive months skiing, hunting out snow patches until
the flakes fall again in September.

Some years that means hunting narrow strips of snow in shaded fissures.
This year, whole peaks in the Sierra Nevada remain covered. More

504
Californians requested life-ending prescriptions, group says

SAN
DIEGO — At least 504 terminally ill Californians have requested a prescription
for life-ending drugs since a state law allowing physician-assisted
deaths went into effect in June 2016, marking the first publicly released
data on how the practice is playing out in the nation’s most populous
state.

The number represents only those who have contacted Compassion & Choices,
an advocacy group that provides information on the process. The organization
believes the overall figure is much higher. More

Gov.
Brown defends gas tax, local legislator

A day after signature gathering began to recall a Fullerton legislator
for supporting new transportation taxes, Gov. Jerry Brown offered an
impassioned defense of the road-improvement plan and of the Democratic
state senator under attack.

Brown was also dismissive of efforts by a Republican assemblyman from
Huntington Beach to qualify a ballot measure that could reverse the
Democrat-backed tax plan.

“Roads require money to fix,” Brown said during a Friday visit to
Orange County. “Republicans say there’s a magic source of money — it
doesn’t exist. … You want to borrow money and pay double? Or do nothing?
Or take money from universities?” More

Why
are doughnut boxes pink? The answer could only come out of Southern
California

Sharon Vilsack pulled into a San Clemente strip mall on a recent morning
to perform one of Southern California’s most quintessential rituals
— picking a pink box of doughnuts to share.

She chose carefully: an old fashioned, plenty of glazed, a few sprinkles,
and a puffy maple bar, all tucked neatly into that familiar container
that so often blends into the background of daily life here.

“I’m like one of Pavlov’s dogs when I see a pink box,” said Vilsack,
29, outside Rose Donuts & Cafe. “My mouth starts watering because I
know what’s inside.” More

Communists
to be allowed to have state jobs in California

Being a member of the Communist Party would no longer be a fireable
offense for state jobs under a measure narrowly approved by the California
Assembly on Monday.

The measure by Assemblyman Rob Bonta (D-Oakland) would strike language
in California law dating from 1953 that warns of "a clear and present
danger, which the Legislature of the State of California finds is great
and imminent, that in order to advance the program, policies and objectives
of the world communism movement, communist organizations in the State
of California and their members will engage in concerted effort to hamper,
restrict, interfere with, impede, or nullify the efforts of the State...and
their members will infiltrate and seek employment by the State and its
public agencies." More

California
shark attacks: Here's why they're on the rise

San Clemente's beaches reopened Wednesday afternoon after a shark attack
four days earlier led to their closure. The daily beach report was accompanied
by a warning: "Enter the water at your own risk."

Leeanne Ericson, a single mother of three, was wading in remote waters
south of San Clemente in Orange County on Saturday when a shark bit
her right leg. A GoFundMe page says the shark tore Ericson's leg from
the glute to her knee and that she is currently "fighting for her life"
at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla.

The incident is particularly jarring for a county that had seen a total
of four shark attacks in the past nine decades before Saturday, according
to data from the University of Florida's International Shark Attack
File. In May 2016, a triathlete was bitten near Corona Del Mar in Newport
Beach, just 30 miles north of the recent incident. Researchers believe
great white sharks are responsible for both attacks. More

A
vineyard’s winged protectors

You may not know that falcons are sentinels -- watching over a number
of our vineyards. John Blackstone has sent us a Dispatch from California
Wine Country:

It’s no wonder Jack London once wrote about California wine country,
“I have everything to make me glad I’m alive.” The rolling hills, the
endless blue skies, and the perfect weather -- it’s a nature lover’s
paradise.

But all that nature can be a problem. Just ask Rams Gate vineyard
manager Ned Hill.

“Deer, rabbits, coyotes, raccoons, foxes, birds, you name it. Grapes
are tasty when they get ripe!” he explained.

And so, like any cash crop, grapes need protection. And here, Beau
Bastian, is the muscle. More

SACRAMENTO – Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia’s hometown of Bell Gardens
is so notoriously contaminated by toxic waste sites and freeways stacked
with diesel trucks that some residents of nearby towns call it “Bell
Garbage.”

Garcia channeled her anger into a successful 2012 Assembly campaign,
and today she is in the vanguard of a movement that is redefining environmentalism
in California. She and her political allies are warriors for “environmental
justice” who argue that Gov. Jerry Brown and state lawmakers should
pay more attention to the polluted air and cancer-causing toxins plaguing
California’s poor and working-class neighborhoods as they pursue the
lofty goal of saving the planet from global warming. More

How
far can California go as it becomes immigrant sanctuary?

California Sen. Dianne Feinstein is a very vocal member of California’s
chorus of complaint about President Donald Trump’s crackdown on undocumented
immigrants.

“I couldn’t be more disappointed that President Trump has used his
first budget proposal to prioritize the border wall – his pet project
– and a deportation force over critical support for state and local
law enforcement,” Feinstein declared in March. Later, when the Department
of Homeland Security laid out a plan to implement his immigration order,
Feinstein fumed that was “simply unparalleled in its meanness, scope
and most likely its enforceability.” More

President
Trump OKs Federal Aid Following California Storms

LOS ANGELES (AP) — President Donald Trump has approved federal assistance
to help California counties recover from winter storms that caused flooding,
mudslides and power outages.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said Sunday that the funds
will aid state, tribal, and local recovery efforts in areas affected
by severe weather from February 1 to February 23.

The assistance will be available in more than two dozen counties,
mostly in the northern part of the state. Gov. Jerry Brown requested
the aid last month. After five years of drought, California saw record-breaking
precipitation this year that led rivers and creeks to break their banks.
More

School
‘lunch shaming’ could end under new California bill

A California lawmaker wants to end “lunch shaming” at campuses across
the state.

Sen. Bob Hertzberg, a Democrat from Los Angeles, is carrying a bill
he says will put a stop to schools embarrassing children whose parents
fall behind on their lunch payments.

Hertzberg says the shaming takes multiple forms: Some students are
altogether denied food while others are given paltry snacks.

Such treatment, he says, “undercuts a child’s ability to learn and
succeed in school. More

Desalination
is no longer a pipe dream in Southern California

Here’s
an idea: Let’s use the ocean to create an endless supply of pure water,
no matter how much rain and snow falls (or doesn’t) on California.

If it sounds like something out of the future, consider: As of today,
seven ocean desalination plants are under consideration along the coasts
from Dana Point through Monterey Bay.

By the mid-2020s, those plants could be using the Pacific to produce
about 10 percent of the fresh water needed in parts of Los Angeles and
Orange counties.

Another project, in Carlsbad, opened about a year ago and is on track
to produce about 8 percent of San Diego’s water.

Desalination, long considered something out of “The Jetsons,” is real

. But also consider this: Though the promise of desalination is appealing
— fresh, clean water that can outlast any drought — critics and water
experts have many questions. More

Feel-good
efforts won’t solve California’s housing crisis

Two
new documents – a report by the state housing agency and Gov. Jerry
Brown’s 2017-18 budget – focus harsh economic reality on fanciful political
“solutions” to the state’s severe housing crisis.

The state has been underbuilding housing for the last decade, ever
since an overheated housing market collapsed.

Despite the ensuing recession, California’s population continued to
grow by over 300,000 persons a year. Households, each with an average
of almost three persons, continued to form. More

Matt Ball isn’t the type of gun enthusiast who hoards ammunition – at
least not normally.

Ball, a 39-year-old banker from Roseville, is a casual shooter who
spends a few days a year at the target range. Typically, when he’s running
low on ammo, he swings by a local sporting-goods store and buys what
he needs, or he orders online.

But like thousands of other hunters and target shooters in California,
Ball has been stocking up in advance of a host of new state gun laws,
set to take effect this year and next, that include ammunition regulations
that are among the most stringent in the nation.

“I’ve definitely been picking up a little more than I typically would,”
Ball said. “I do worry about – not so much about supply but prices.
The fact California has these extra rules in place, what’s that going
to be like?” More

Former
U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric Holder visits Sacramento to meet with California's
legislators

With California’s relationship to President Trump growing increasingly
strained, Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday met in person with the high-profile
attorney tasked with shaping their strategy for upcoming clashes: former
U.S. Atty. Gen. Eric Holder.

Holder, along with five lawyers from his firm, met separately with
the Senate and Assembly Democratic caucuses. That afternoon, there was
a confab in the governor’s office with legislative leaders and, via
telephone, state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra.

“I'm here just to assist these gentlemen and the people who they serve
with in trying to protect the interests of the people of California,”
Holder said as he stood alongside De León (D-Los Angeles) and Assembly
Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount). When asked how he would provide
such assistance, he simply answered, “Well.” More

California
secession movement starts gathering petition signatures

Backers seeking to break California away from the U.S. started collecting
signatures Friday to get a proposed independence measure on the 2018
statewide ballot.

This isn't the first effort aimed at California secession but leaders
say the previous tries were mostly about building awareness of the issue
and increasing public support. They say recent polls show more Californians
want a divorce from the union and believe that President Donald Trump's
election also has boosted their cause.

"We definitely see that there's some newfound support for this and
we want to get the signatures out there, especially now because we're
in the first 100 days of Donald Trump's presidency when he's going to
be aggressively pursuing his policies that the people of California
are going to reject — and have rejected," Louis Marinelli, president
of the Yes California Independence movement, said Friday. More

There’s
a right way for Fortress California to hunker down

Saturday’s extraordinary protest marches notwithstanding, California
greets President Donald Trump with a fresh eye and high hopes that he
will soon earn the benefit of the doubt.

But it’s not for nothing that Golden State Democrats have spent the
past three months girding for chaos.

We extended health insurance to millions under the Affordable Care
Act. Trump and the Republican Congress have vowed to dismantle it and
replace it with – well, they haven’t yet said what.

We are the sixth largest player in the global economy.

Trump has vowed to end the North American Free Trade Agreement and
bashed China and Mexico, major trading partners. More

Sonoma’s
Wackiest Wineries

Winemaking is serious business. Especially in California’s Sonoma County,
heart of the Wine Country, where every visitor’s a connoisseur (or least
pretends to be a connoisseur) and every winery a no-nonsense temple
to the art of the grape.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Where is the fun, the laughter,
the spirit of Bacchus which used to be the whole point of drinking wine?
Must tourists solemnly trek from tasting room to tasting room forever
commenting on terroir and bottle-shock and mouthfeel?

Luckily, some Sonoma wineries have begun to put the fun back in fundamentals,
realizing that a sense of humor not only makes wine more enjoyable but
more importantly is a good way to attract customers. The next time you
make a pilgrimage to the Wine Country, swing by some of Sonoma’s wackiest
tasting rooms, where you don’t have to be a master sommelier to have
a good time More

It's
all part of Gov. Brown's plan to fight climate change

California Gov. Jerry Brown kept up his assault on climate change Monday,
pushing through a law meant to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions from
dairy farms and landfills. "You know, when Noah wanted to build his
ark, most of the people laughed at him?"

Brown's approval of Senate Bill 1383 goes after short-lived climate
pollutants, which include methane, black carbon, and HFC gases, per
the AP. Although these gases don't linger in the atmosphere, they still
make people sick and hasten global warming due to their heat-trapping
ability, per Reuters. "We're protecting people's lungs and their health,"
Brown said, per Courthouse News. More

Millipede
discovered in California has 414 legs, four penises

SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK, California (AP) — What has 414 legs and four
penises? Until recently, nothing we knew of.

Scientists have discovered new species of millipede with just those
far-out features in a cave in California’s Sequoia National Park.

The pale bug’s 414 legs are actually fairly meager for a millipede.
Some species can have as many as 750. None have 1,000, though the name
means “thousand feet.

” Like some other species, this millipede also has four modified legs
that are used as penises.

The discovery was made by Jean Krejca of the Texas group Zara Environmental
LLC. Millipede experts Paul Marek at Virginia Tech and Bill Shear at
Virginia’s Hampden-Sydney College classified the creature. More

Baby
Kidnapped for Two Years and Innocent Mother Incarcerated

Tammi Stefano interviewed Amy Duran on Friday August 28th on The National
Safe Child Show. Amy is a mother who had her son taken by Los Angeles
County’s Department of Child and Family Services (DCFS) with the help
of the Police Department. Vindictive people used DCFS and local law
enforcement to kidnap Amy’s son, and to put Amy into a holding cell
in a detention center where she was told she would spend the next 12
years, even though she had violated no laws and was not convicted of
any crimes. During this time, Amy fainted several times, and could not
tell the difference between night and day as there were no windows in
the cell.

Amy never gave up, however. She fought back, and over three and a
half years later she won her case and had her son returned to her custody.

Her son was kidnapped by DCFS when he was 11 months old, and at age
4 he has now spent half of his life away from his mother and in foster
care with strange people. More

California
soldiers must repay enlistment bonuses

Short
of troops to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan a decade ago, the California
National Guard enticed thousands of soldiers with bonuses of $15,000
or more to reenlist and go to war.

Now the Pentagon is demanding the money back.

Nearly 10,000 soldiers, many of whom served multiple combat tours,
have been ordered to repay large enlistment bonuses — and slapped with
interest charges, wage garnishments and tax liens if they refuse — after
audits revealed widespread overpayments by the California Guard at the
height of the wars last decade. More

Californians
more likely to use guns to kill themselves than others

The debate over firearms safety and the effects of rising gun sales
tends to revolve around the best way to keep guns out of the hands of
criminals. But about 21,000 Californians committed suicide with a firearm
between 2001 and 2014, almost equal to the number of firearm homicide
victims.

From 2009 through 2014, the number of people who used a gun to kill
themselves in California actually outpaced the number who used a gun
to commit homicide. That's largely because the homicide rate has fallen,
while the suicide rate has remained steady (4.1 per 100,000 in 2014).
More

Sacramento County has settled another lawsuit involving its jail, this
time agreeing to pay $45,000 to an attorney who says she was falsely
accused of exposing herself to a client while visiting him when he was
locked up.

The settlement agreement also required the Sheriff’s Department to
revise its policies on how it handles cases in which wrongdoing by an
attorney during a confidential client visit is suspected.

The unusual case stemmed from a November 2014 incident at Rio Cosumnes
Correctional Center, in which attorney Sage Kaveny was accused of removing
her pants and boots and engaging in sexually explicit conduct while
visiting a client. More

New
California law requires actors’ ages removed from IMDb upon request

In a move to curb age discrimination in Hollywood casting, California
has signed into law a bill requiring websites such as IMDb to remove
mention of an actor’s age or birthday upon request.

Governor Jerry Brown signed AB 1687 on Saturday after it passed both
the State Assembly and the State Senate with ease. Effective January
1st, 2017, any online entertainment database that hosts information
relevant to hiring (resumés, headshots, etc.) must remove or leave unpublished
someone’s age or birthday should a paying subscriber submit a request.
IMDb is the most popular and commonly known site that falls under the
law’s coverage. Though the law was specifically designed to protect
actors and actresses from age discrimination, it also applies to any
entertainment industry job. More

With
governor’s veto, California’s ‘tampon tax’ will survive, for now

A national movement is steadily gaining steam, and its backers have
one simple demand: Stop taxing menstrual products.

Some states have heeded the call. In the past year, officials in New
York, Illinois and Connecticut have passed measures to end increasingly
unpopular sales taxes on tampons, pads, menstrual cups and other feminine-hygiene
items.

Five other states have also nixed the “tampon tax,” which treats menstrual
products as luxury goods rather than tax-free medical necessities. But
America’s most populous state won’t be joining the push.

On Tuesday, California Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill that would have
ended the state’s tax on menstrual products. The measure was one of
seven pieces of legislation Brown killed Tuesday, citing the state’s
budget woes.

“Tax breaks are the same thing as new spending,” the governor said
in a statement. More

California
dominates list of car theft 'hot spots'

Proceed to the Central Valley with caution if you'd like your car to
drive back from wherever you came. The Central Valley region appeared
many times in a ranking of nationwide car thefts. Eight California metro
areas made the top 10 list, including the San Francisco-Oakland region.
Beyond the top 10, San Jose, Santa Cruz, Fresno and other California
cities made an appearance.

The National Insurance Crime Bureau ranked (and mapped
out) the nation's metropolitan areas each year by car-theft rate
and also issued a ranking for each state. More

Hiroshi Motohashi was angry with the management of the Studio City sushi
restaurant, so police said he decided to leave something for other customers
to remember him by.

Instead of "dropping the mic" after a memorable rant, officials say
the 46-year-old man dropped a 13-foot-long snake in the middle of the
restaurant — then slithered out.

Motohashi later was arrested on suspicion of making criminal threats,
said Lt. Jim Gavin of the Los Angeles Police Department in Van Nuys.

The cold-blooded act unfolded about 7:20 p.m. Sunday when Motohashi
entered Iroha Sushi of Tokyo in the 12900 block of Ventura Boulevard
and showed off a small snake to customers sitting down for dinner. More

California
closes the Steve Jobs license plate loophole

One of the many things Steve Jobs was famous for was his refusal to
put a license plate on the back of his car, a Mercedes-Benz SL55 AMG.

Jobs—or someone close to him—spotted a loophole in California DMV
regulations allowing six months of grace before a license plate had
to be attached to a new car.

As a result, the Apple supremo maintained a rolling six-month lease
on a series of new SL55 AMGs, replacing one with another just before
the grace period ran out.

Jobs is no longer with us, but in case any of his disciples were in
the habit of copying his phobia of license plates, watch out. On Monday,
California Governor Jerry Brown signed a new law that does away with
the loophole. From 2019, California joins most of the other states in
the nation by requiring newly bought cars to be issued temporary license
plates. More

California
counties push for all-out fracking ban

California is known for some of the strictest fracking regulations in
the country, but some activist groups now seek an all-out ban.

Those groups had a victory this week in Butte County, where a ballot
ban on fracking passed with more than 70 percent of the vote.

“It’s been really a community organizing triumph as much as anything
else,” Ken Fleming said, an organizer with Frack-Free Butte County.

“The message was pretty clear: Do you wanna trust the oil companies,
or do you wanna make sure to continue to have clean water? I think that
question was a pretty clear result.” This November, Monterey County,
one of the state’s top 10 oil-producing counties, will consider a similar
ballot initiative to end fracking. More

On the morning of May 31, Peter Boada had a hankering for some doughnuts.

He jumped into his 2007 Toyota Prius and started it up, but the normally
quiet hybrid sedan sounded like a race car on the NASCAR circuit. Overnight,
thieves had sawed off the catalytic converter, leaving no functioning
exhaust system.

“The thought occurred to him, ‘if they took mine, they probably took
yours, too,’ ” said his girlfriend, Xandy Mancao, 31. Boada, 30, was
exactly right. When Mancao rushed out to her car — also a 2007 Prius
and also parked in front of their apartment — she was greeted by the
same deafening sound as she engaged the ignition switch — a roar echoing
through Highland Park where they live, and a sound becoming increasingly
more common in other parts of southeast Los Angeles and the west San
Gabriel Valley during the past eight months. More

Huge
rise in number of great white sharks spotted off California coast

If you fancy hitting the surf off the cost of California, keep your
eyes peeled because the number of juvenile great white shark sightings
has shot up.

Before 2015, Huntington Beach was never closed due to shark activity
- but this year, there have already been three closures.

'I've seen more white sharks this year than I have in the previous
30,' Lt. Claude Panis of the Huntington Beach Fire Department's Marine
Safety Division told LA Times.com.

With the increase in great white sightings in the last few years,
researchers who have been studying juvenile sharks off neighboring Sunset
Beach said the predators have a tendency to leave during the colder
months and head toward Mexico. However, scientists at Cal State Long
Beach's Shark Lab said some have remained in the area as a result of
warmer waters due to El Nino. More

Hollywood
embraces California’s grittier edge

The setting for Hollywood’s newest gangland drama – TNT’s series “Animal
Kingdom,” about a crime family headed by Ellen Barkin – might seem surprising:
Oceanside, in northern San Diego County.

It shouldn’t: Oceanside is exactly what Hollywood looks for in California
these days, and not just because a gangsters-by-the-sea story makes
it easy to mix TV’s favorite forms of titillation: bikinis and Berettas.

Oceanside is a city of 175,000 on the northernmost edge of greater
San Diego at a moment when producers are seeking stories from California’s
edges. More

California
among 10 states with worst emergency response times

In a health emergency, timing is crucial. Minutes ticking by can literally
mean life or death. Recently, HBO's John Oliver critiqued the lackadaisical
911 response in the U.S., stating, "Ubers can find you better than ambulances
can. Depending on where you live, [911 dispatchers] may also be underfunded,
understaffed and full of outdated technology - which is fine, if you're
describing a Radio Shack."

But what happens at the next step, when we arrive at the hospital
in an ambulance or on our own? Many people still face a painfully long
wait before they are seen by a physician or properly diagnosed. HealthGrove,
a health data site that's part of Graphiq, wanted to find out which
states have the slowest emergency department response. Using data collected
from a Medicare survey of more than 4,000 hospitals, HealthGrove found
the 10 states with the slowest emergency response times based their
Timeliness Score. More

California
lawmakers unplug the state's electric car program

A few months ago, Gabriel Lua purchased a 2013 Chevy Volt to replace
his 1987 Honda Civic, which had been giving him exhaust headaches and
made him worry about the health of his children, ages 3 and 5.

Even though the old Civic had failed the state's smog test three times
and was costing him hundreds of dollars a month in maintenance, Lua
said he couldn’t afford to replace it until he learned about a state
incentive that helps low-income residents in California’s most polluted
communities replace their dirty cars. The state covered more than half
the new car’s price tag.

“It saves me gas. It saves me money. I feel safer. And most important,
it’s for my kids,” said Lua, a 31-year-old mail carrier for a San Joaquin
Valley school district. More

California
panels approve raft of gun control bills in wake of Orlando massacre

SACRAMENTO -- Two days after the worst mass shooting in modern U.S.
history, two key legislative committees on Tuesday approved a sweeping
package of gun control legislation following the year's most fiery hearings.

During the state Assembly Public Safety Committee, Democrats sparred
with a National Rifle Association lobbyist who testified against several
of the bills, calling him "crazy" and "vicious" for protecting the killers
who "terrorize our streets." And when the lobbyist said the legislation
wouldn't help save lives, one lawmaker suggested washing his mouth with
soap.

"The reason they were murdered was because of your organization," said
another lawmaker, Assemblyman Evan Low, an openly gay Silicon Valley
Democrat who was speaking about the 49 people slaughtered early Sunday
at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida. "It's difficult for me to sit
here and look you in the eye and respect you." More

America's
vanishing West: California losing most land to development

The natural landscape of the American West is gradually disappearing
under a relentless march of new subdivisions, roads, oil and gas production,
agricultural operations and other human development, according to a
detailed mapping study released Tuesday.

From 2001 to 2011, an area totaling 4,321 square miles -- or 15 times
the size of San Jose, Oakland and San Francisco combined -- was modified
by development in the 11 Western states, the report found, with California
losing the most natural land, and Wyoming and Utah changing at the fastest
rate.

"We are nibbling away at our wild places at a fairly rapid clip,"
said Mike Dombeck, former chief of the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S.
Bureau of Land Management in the 1990s. More

What
Will California Do With Too Much Solar?

Solar energy records are falling left and right in California these
days, as the state steams ahead toward its ambitious renewable energy
goals.

But the success of solar has brought about a hidden downside: on some
perfectly sunny days, solar farms are being told to turn off.

That’s because in the spring and fall, when Californians aren’t using
much air conditioning and demand for electricity is low, the surge of
midday solar power is more than the state can use.

It’s becoming a growing concern for those running the grid at the
California Independent System Operator. At their Folsom headquarters,
a team continually manages the power supply for most of the state, keeping
the lights on for some 30 million people. More

Marin
begins cycling speed enforcement campaign on open space trails

County
parks officials launched a new bicycle speed enforcement program on
open space trails this weekend, stationing two staffers with special
radar-type devices in areas that have generated public safety complaints.

Officials hesitated to characterize the move as a crackdown, preferring
instead to call it a pilot program that initially will be aimed at educating
trail users.

"We want to get data, educate users and hopefully gain a useful tool,"
said Max Korten, assistant director of county parks. "Through the Road
and Trail Management Plan there are a number of proposals to open trail
alignments to bikes that have caused safety concerns among some neighbors
and preserve visitors about the speed of bikes on the trails," he said.
"It's important that as we consider implementing some of these proposals;
we have a tool to address this potential issue." More

FBI
Investigating Reports Of 17 Men Chanting, Firing Off Shots In Apple
Valley

APPLE VALLEY — The FBI on Tuesday continued to investigate an incident
in which 17 men were detained for reportedly firing off hundreds of
rounds in a remote part of Apple Valley.

San Bernardino County Sheriff’s deputies and an FBI agent responded
to the scene Sunday morning and detained the men – reportedly all of
Middle Eastern descent – who were camping out in the Deep Creek Hot
Springs area Sunday morning, authorities said.

A 911 caller reported hearing over 100 shots fired and seeing five
to seven men wearing turbans and shooting “assault rifles, handguns,
and shotguns,” according to a Sheriff’s Department statement. A county
sheriff’s helicopter located the men walking near a creek with backpacks
“and other items”, The Los Angeles Times reported. More

Anti-auto
campaign falls flat

California politicians want to lure – or force – the state’s 26 million
licensed motorists to sharply reduce their driving.

Over the last decade, many legislative bills, numerous executive orders
and a paper blizzard of plans and regulations from state agencies have
declared war on petroleum-burning cars.

Adopted in the name of reducing climate-changing carbon emissions,
strategies include spending billions on mass transit, goading local
governments into fostering transit-oriented, high-density housing, raising
driving costs, and allowing traffic congestion to worsen. More

Bullet
train's first segment, reserved for Southland, could open in Bay Area
instead

A
valuable perk handed to Southern California from the bullet train project
— a 2012 decision to build the first operating segment from Burbank
north into the Central Valley — is being reconsidered by state officials.

The state rail authority is studying an alternative to build the first
segment in the Bay Area, running trains from San Jose to Bakersfield.
If the plan does change, it would be a significant reversal that carries
big financial, technical and political impacts, especially in Southern
California.

“You can’t ignore Southern California or Los Angeles or Orange County
and say we are going to go north, period,” said Richard Katz, a longtime
Southern California transportation official and former Assembly majority
leader. “It made sense to start in the south, given the population and
the serious transportation problems here.” More

The
Porter Ranch Gas Leak: Blame Gov. Jerry Brown

News came earlier this week that the horrific gas leak spewing methane
at a natural gas storage facility in Porter Ranch, just outside Los
Angeles, will be capped and contained by the end of February. Of course,
it’s a promise that has come far too late. If you think Donald Trump
is a national disgrace, you haven’t been paying much attention to what’s
been happening here in California. Not that you can be blamed for not
knowing how bad the atmosphere-warming leak actually is, nobody that
has the power to do anything about it seems to care all that much, certainly
not California’s governor-for-life Jerry Brown.

While the leak was first discovered in late October, it took Brown
two full months to declare a state of emergency. This, after UC Davis
scientist Stephen Conley in early November determined that 100,000 pounds
of methane was leaking per hour at the site, or 1,200 tons per day.
Of course, this inaction is par for the course for Brown, who has long
ignored the perils of oil and gas production in the state, especially
when it comes to fracking, which may have played a role in the Porter
Ranch rupture. In the short term, scientists estimate the leaking methane
is more than 80 times more potent than CO2 when it comes warming of
our atmosphere. More

Woman
found in refrigerator in Santa Ana had been there more than a year

A woman found dead in a refrigerator in Santa Ana last week had been
there for over a year, police said Tuesday.

The couple who placed the body there told police she was a relative
they had been caring for, but they didn’t report her death to authorities
because of their immigration status, said Cpl. Anthony Bertagna of the
Santa Ana Police Department.

Around 2 p.m. Thursday, a homeowner was cleaning a detached garage
in the 1000 block of North Jackson Street so it could be rented out
when the refrigerator inside was opened because of a strong odor coming
from it, Bertagna said.

A couple had been the last tenants in the garage, but moved out around
September. Detectives found them several hours later in Garden Grove,
where they now live, Bertagna said.

They said the woman in the refrigerator was Ricarda Reyes-Villalobos
and that she was a relative from Mexico under their care, he said. More

New
2016 California laws take effect: What you need to know

LOS ANGELES -- As Southern Californians rang in the new year, they also
rang in a new set of laws.

SB 491 will make it illegal to wear earbuds or headsets in both ears
while driving a vehicle or riding a bicycle.

Riders on electric skateboards must be 16 years or older, wear helmets
and ride on roads with a speed limit of 35 mph or less. Under AB 604,
it will also be against the law to ride an electric skateboard while
under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

The state's emergency alert system, typically used as Amber Alerts
in child-abduction cases, will be used to broadcast a "Yellow Alert"
to find hit-and-run drivers in incidents that result in death or major
injuries. AB 8 written by Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Glendale) takes
effect on Jan. 1, 2016.

AB 10 will raise California's minimum wage to $10 an hour from $9
an hour, well above the federal minimum of $7.25 an hour. Several legislative
and ballot initiative proposals will push for a $15 an hour minimum
wage as early as 2020. More

A possible record-breaking El Niño is attracting dozens of sharks, even
hammerheads, off the coast of Southern California, experts say.

The periodic ocean pattern characterized by unusually warm water in
the eastern Pacific could cause heavy rain as it heats the atmosphere
and changes circulation patterns, according to forecasters. But experts
say the weather is drawing dozens of great white sharks and several
hammerheads to the coast because their food sources are migrating from
more tropical areas, the Huntington Beach Independent reported.

"You've got a whole tropical food chain that's moved into our neighborhood,"
said Chris Lowe, a marine biology professor at Cal State Long Beach.
"That warm water is bringing that food up here, and that food is being
followed by its predators. That's how we get that subtropical food web
that we normally don't have showing up here." More

All
20 ‘Worst Small Cities in America’ in California

The annual WalletHub’s 2015 “Best & Worst Small Cities in America” found
that all 20 of the worst small cities in America to live in are in California.

Each year WalletHub publishes a list of the best small cities in America
by measuring cities with population size of between 25,000 and 100,000
residents according to a scoring system of between 0 and 100 rating
four factors: “1) Affordability, 2) Economic Health, 3) Education &
Health and 4) Quality of Life.”

In addition, WalletHub compiles “22 relevant metrics” on each city.
California seldom dominates a rating list for anything. But the not-so-Golden
State managed to have the 22 lowest ranked towns of the 1,268 small
cities in America. More

Fur
Seal Pups Mysteriously Washing Up on California Shores

A Guadalupe fur seal pup, wasted away to nearly fur and bones, washed
up on the shore’s of California’s Humboldt County in April. He was spotted
and whisked to the Bay Area’s Marine Mammal Center, soon to be named
Ian and become the first juvenile of his species to ever wear a satellite
tag. But his odds of seeing the ocean again after doctors tried to rehabilitate
him, like dozens of other fur seal pups mysteriously turning up on California
shores, were grim.

The appearance of these pups, many of whom are already dead by the
time they wash to shore, has led the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration to declare what is known as a UME—an unusual mortality
event. So far in 2015, roughly 80 of them have been found stranded,
a rate eight times higher than normal. Especially alarming for marine
biologists is that, unlike sea lion pups that are experiencing their
own bizarre strandings, the Guadalupe fur seals are listed as threatened
under the Endangered Species Act, with some 15,000 estimated to exist
in the world. More

Witnesses
Report Seeing Bright Light Across Southern California Sky

Viewers across California and parts of the West Coast reported seeing
a strange, large flash of light across the Pacific Ocean Saturday night
as the U.S. Navy was conducting a missile test.

Many viewers called NBC San Diego, NBC Southern California and NBC
Bay Area reporting a green and blue colored streak of bright light through
the sky, reported as far south as Mexico and as far north as the Bay
Area.

Some viewers even reported seeing it in Nevada, Colorado and Arizona.

"It was really slow and then exploded really gray and there was some
blue lights it just looked really weird," Sokhom Thoeun, who was walking
on a San Diego beach, told NBC7. More

Incredibly
Venomous’ Yellow-Bellied Sea Snake Seen in California for 1st Time in
30 Years

At least one yellow-bellied sea snake, which lives its entire life in
the ocean, was recently spotted on a beach in the Oxnard area.

The reptile typically lives in warmer tropical waters, and its appearance
is probably a harbinger of El Niño, the cyclical weather phenomenon
connected to warmer sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, according
to Santa Monica-based Heal the Bay.

The snake sighting was highlighted the nonprofit environmental advocacy
group in a blog post on Friday.

"The Yellow-bellied Sea Snake has some of the most poisonous venom
in the world, and is a descendant from Asian cobras and Australian tiger
snakes," stated the post by Heal the Bay’s senior coastal policy manager,
Dana Murray. More

More
California Winemakers Using Less Water to Grow Grapes

The grape vines that grower Frank Leeds tends in Napa Valley stand among
the unheralded heroes of California's drought, producing decade after
decade of respected Cabernets and other wines without a drop of added
water.

In a state where farms and dairies take the biggest gulp of the water
supply, Leeds and the owners of his Frog's Leap Winery are among a minority
— but a growing minority — of California growers and winemakers who
believe that when it comes to wine grapes, the less irrigation, the
better.

"This is not struggling, skinny, tiny grapevines, right?" Leeds asked
proudly earlier this growing season while leading a tour through the
dry-farmed rows of wine grapes. More

The
Strangest Place You’ll Ever See Bison — on SoCal’s Catalina Island

“Bison, on an island? Off the coast of Los Angeles? Aren’t they… out
of place?” I asked my tour guide with the Catalina Island Conservancy.

Here’s what he told me.

“In 1924, 14 bison were flown onto Catalina Island to be extras in
a film called The Vanishing American…”

“Oh, so they come from a lineage of famous bison!”

No, he said, and then continued.

It turns out you won’t actually spot any buffalo in the background
of the film because their scenes were ultimately left on the cutting
room floor. After shooting wrapped, the bison spread out over the island
and instead of rounding them up, island owner William Wrigley, Jr. decided
to let them stay. More bison were eventually flown in to increase the
gene pool and now, nearly a century later, about 135 bison populate
the 22-mile, picture-perfect island off the coast of southern California.
So even though they missed their shot at fame, the animals did find
themselves a new home. More

Naked
woman rescued 3 miles off Newport Beach puzzles officials

Officials are unsure how a woman ended up naked in the water three miles
off the Newport Beach coast before being rescued Sunday.

A pair of kayakers found the 28-year-old around 10 a.m. She was calling
for help about three miles out from the Newport Harbor jetty, said Sgt.
D.J. Haldeman of the Orange County Sheriff's Department Harbor Patrol.

According to Haldeman, the woman — whom authorities didn't identify
— was alone without a boat, a flotation device or even a bathing suit.

"She was completely naked," he said. The woman told Harbor Patrol
deputies that she had been in the water since the night before.

She said she was swimming at around 5:30 p.m. Saturday near 19th Street
when a rip current swept her out, Haldeman said. At some point during
the roughly 16 hours, the woman said, she took off her swimsuit "so
it wouldn't restrict her in her abilities to swim," Haldeman said. More

LONE PINE, Calif. — The gas station's ground was covered with the small
winged bugs. Piles of carcasses, inches deep, sat swept to the sides.

On the road, they rained onto car windshields. They flew by the thousands
toward even the smallest sources of light, and crept along windows and
kitchen tables.

Such has been the skin-crawling reality for the past two months in
the high-desert communities at the foot of the Sierra Nevada's eastern
slopes, where residents have seen an explosion of the black-and-red
seed bug species Melacoryphus lateralis.

"They're in everything. There's no way to get rid of them or eradicate
them. They're just here," said Blair Nicodemus, 33, of Lone Pine, while
driving with a bug creeping on his windshield. "Sometimes there will
be these micro-plumes that'll come through where there will be just
thousands of them, and they'll be all over you. ... I'm sure I've eaten
at least two dozen, because they get into your food." More

California
cities cracking down on summer rentals

LOS ANGELES Millions flock to the Southern California coast each year,
often renting a cottage or condo for a respite by the sea.

But the explosive growth of online travel booking sites in recent
years has prompted several coastal cities to consider tightening regulations
on those who rent out their homes for short stays.

While proponents of the short-term rental industry say the additional
income often is vital to property owners’ livelihoods and the local
economy, city leaders and neighbors want greater oversight to protect
residential neighborhoods, tax revenue and the availability of housing
amid a booming industry.

Santa Monica, Laguna Beach, Los Angeles, Manhattan Beach and West Hollywood
are among the latest Southern California cities taking up the regulation
of short-term rentals. More

This is the blaze that firefighters have braced for all year, the ferocious
Rocky Fire burning near Clear Lake that has destroyed more than two
dozen homes and hit with the kind of force long-dreaded because of California's
historic drought.

On Monday, it had grown to more than 62,000 acres -- nearly the size
of Sacramento at 94 square miles -- and more than doubled the total
acreage burned by wildfires throughout the state so far this year.

Throughout California's forests, vegetation is so dry and so dense
that flying embers, which in wetter years would fizzle out, are igniting
at the mere touch of grass or shrub. As one UC Berkeley scientist who
studies the Sierra puts it, the forests "are primed and ready to go."

SACRAMENTO -- Ending months of speculation on whether he would endorse
the incendiary legislation, Gov. Jerry Brown this morning signed into
law Senate Bill 277, which requires almost all California schoolchildren
to be fully vaccinated in order to attend public or private school,
regardless of their parents' personal or religious beliefs.

California now joins only two other states -- Mississippi and West
Virginia -- that permit only medical exemptions as legitimate reasons
to sidestep vaccinations.

"The science is clear that vaccines dramatically protect children
against a number of infectious and dangerous diseases,'' Brown wrote
in his signing message.

"While it's true that no medical intervention is without risk, the
evidence shows that immunization powerfully benefits and protects the
community.'' More

Drought
may hasten demise of California's enigmatic Salton Sea

Created by an accidental Colorado River canal breach in 1905, Salton
Sea benefitted the area's rich farming culture, as agriculture in the
Imperial Valley long received more water from the river than was proportional.
The sea was sustained by (often toxic) farming run-off. The area became
a tourist destination in the 1950s and 1960s, yet the situation became
increasingly unsustainable.

Colorado River dependent states like Nevada and Arizona demanded more
share of resources starting in the 1990s. A Quantification Settlement
Agreement was signed among several California water agencies regarding
allocation of water from the Colorado River in 2003. According to the
2003 deal, farmers in the state's Imperial Valley agreed to halt working
on some 50,000 acres and to send that water to San Diego and Coachella
Valley residents. The urban areas paid for water conservation efforts
in the Imperial Valley, including lining canals and drip irrigation
systems.

Salton Sea was given 32 billion gallons of water per year pursuant
to the agreement since the lake had been sustained through agricultural
runoff since it was created by the canal breach. More

Dolphin
leaps onto boat, injuring California woman

SANTA
ANA, Calif. (AP) — A dolphin leaped onto a boat in Southern California,
crashing into a woman and breaking both her ankles.

Chrissie Frickman was boating with her husband and two children June
21 when a pod of dolphins swam alongside them. One of the animals jumped
on the vessel, knocking Frickman over and landing on her legs.

"The dolphin jumped and we thought it was doing a flip and I guess
it miscalculated," said her husband, Dirk Frickman. "It came right onto
my wife and flopped in the boat and knocked down and grazed my daughter."

"The dolphin was flopping all over," he said. "It cut its nose and
its tail. Blood started splattering everywhere." Frickman pulled his
wife free and called authorities as he headed toward an Orange County
harbor. While he steered, he splashed water on the 350-pound dolphin
to keep it alive. More

Pot
Legalization Could Bring A Million Jobs to California

An estimated 100,000 people are currently employed in California's marijuana
industry, but that number could grow 10-fold within a few years, according
to the California Cannabis Industry Association.

There is one big "if," though. That's if California actually gets
around to legalizing it next year.

It does seem extremely likely: A well-financed legalization campaign
will almost certainly make the ballot next year, and the latest polls
have a majority for legalization.

And it will be a presidential election year, spurring the turnout
of young people, who tend to be even more supportive of freeing the
weed.

If California legalizes it, the industry will be primed for rapid expansion
and could generate a million jobs within eight years, said the group's
executive director Nate Bradley. More

Guinness
record set for most surfers riding wave

Long-time Huntington Beach surfer Gary Sahagen had a prediction about
how the world record attempt to get the most people riding one wave
would go down.

“It’s either going to be spectacular, or a spectacle,” Sahagen said,
before joining 66 other surfers crammed onto a 42-foot board on the
south side of the Huntington Beach Pier.

Turns out, it was a lot of both. An estimated 5,000 people watched
from the sand and Huntington Beach pier Saturday morning as Surf City
claimed the Guinness World Record for the most people riding a wave
on a single board, shattering the previous record set in Queensland,
Australia about a decade ago, when 47 surfers rode a wave for 10 seconds.
More

Tiny
Red Crabs Blanket California Beaches

Hundreds of thousands of tiny crabs have been washing up on Southern
California beaches, marring the sandy coastline with streaks of red,
as warm ocean currents carry them farther north and closer to shore
than usual, officials said on Wednesday.

The red tuna crabs have been dying in hordes on beaches from San Diego
to Orange County, although some have been washed back out to sea alive.

Such strandings take place periodically and are not necessarily a
threat to the species, according to Linsey Sala, collection manager
for the Pelagic Invertebrates Collection at the University of California,
San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, "This is definitely
a warm-water indicator," Sala said.

"Whether it's directly related to El Nino or other oceanographic conditions
is not certain." More

California
love: Water thieves just can’t get enough

LOS ANGELES — Something rare quickly becomes valuable. So it should
come as no surprise that the latest target of thieves in a state suffering
a historic drought is water.

California thieves are cutting pipes and taking water from fire hydrants,
storage tanks, creeks and rivers to get their hands on several hundred
gallons of the precious commodity. They drive in the thick of night
with a 1,000-gallon tank on the back of a pickup and go after the liquid
gold wherever they can find it. Some have hit the same target twice
in one night, filling up their tank, unloading it into storage and returning
for a second fill-up.

Counties, mostly in the more rural northern parts of California, are
reporting a surge in thefts and illegal diversions of water from wells
and streams.

The prime suspects are illegal marijuana farmers desperate for water
before the fall harvest, which would explain the surge in water thievery
over the summer. More

California
rent increasing, higher than national average

LOS ANGELES -- A not so surprising statistic released in a new report:
Californians are paying more for rent than the average American.

According to the report, released by apartmentlist.com, the median
rental price of a one-bedroom apartment in California in March was $1,350
-- 43 percent more than the national average. And that number is rising.

"It's pretty brutal," said Ben Bednarz, who is currently looking for
an apartment in the Los Angeles area. The report found the median cost
of a one-bedroom apartment in California increased by 6.5 percent in
the last year.

"I could go to Nebraska and I could just buy a house for $200,000,
and a pretty big house probably too, but, you know, then I would have
to live in Nebraska," Bednarz said. More

Number
of whales trapped in fishing gear on California coast spikes

MOSS LANDING -- A record number of whales are becoming ensnared in fishing
gear, including a killer whale that died last week north of Fort Bragg,
according to federal data released Tuesday by environmental groups.

Last year, 30 whales were caught in gear, often from crab pots --
double the previous year. And alarmingly, the National Marine Fisheries
Service has recorded 25 such incidents already this year, with several
Monterey Bay whales becoming wrapped up in ropes and other fishing equipment.

"It's heartbreaking to know so many whales are getting tangled up
in fishing gear. They often drown or drag gear around until they're
too exhausted to feed. Even more disturbing is that this problem is
only getting worse," said Catherine Kilduff, an attorney with the Center
for Biological Diversity, in a statement.

But in an unusual move, crab fishermen -- who were made aware of the
issue just last week -- are working with environmentalists on collaborative
solutions to the problem. More

Suspected
marijuana grower fatally shot at wildlife refuge

Investigators are all too familiar with the Sacramento County wildlife
refuge where a man suspected of illegally growing marijuana was shot
dead early Wednesday.

The Stone Lakes National Wildlife Refuge is a popular place for illegal
grow operations, officials said, and one of several in the Sacramento
area that keeps law enforcement officers coming back almost every year
to confront growers and uproot harmful pot plants and toxic chemicals
from protected land.

Farmers who grow illegally on public land are usually armed and dangerous,
state Department of Justice spokeswoman Michelle Gregory said. Last
time law enforcement raided a grow operation in the rural nature preserve
near Hood-Franklin Road, it was 2013. Then they found two men carrying
shotguns. Both were arrested. More

Jerry
Brown urges fines of up to $10,000 for water waste in California drought

Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday proposed granting new enforcement powers
to local agencies in California’s ongoing drought, including penalties
of as much as $10,000 for the most egregious violations of conservation
orders.

Brown said he will also propose legislation to speed environmental
permitting for local water supply projects, though not – significantly
– for dams.

Neither proposal had taken bill form yet Tuesday, and specifics were
unclear. The Democratic governor announced the measures after meeting
with the mayors of 14 cities in Sacramento.

“We’ve done a lot,” Brown told reporters at the Capitol. “We have a
long way to go.” More

In
Spite Of Severe Drought, California Dumps Billions Of Gallons Of Water
To ‘Make The Fish Happy’

California is due to run out of water in about a year and has no backup
plan for 38 million residents sitting in the middle of land soon that
will soon revert back to a desert, according to prominent NASA scientists.

But in the face of this grave situation, liberal, environmental policy
insanity still triumps as billions of gallons of water is being released
from what little is left in the dams – and it’s not for the humans.

“We’re now in the fourth year of the worst drought in the history
of California,” states Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif., who is frantically
working to end the federal and state policies which prioritizes fish
over people ahead of another major water release already scheduled.
More

The
Big Problem With the Latest Plan to Build EV Chargers in California

One of the biggest obstacles to the widespread adoption of electric
vehicles is the lack of on-the-go charging. It’s easy enough to charge
at home if you have a garage—not so useful for apartment-dwellers who
could benefit the most from EVs—but, unless you have a Tesla and access
to the company’s Supercharger network, plugging in on the go is a pain.

That’s why build-out of the EV charging network is so important to
the longterm success of the technology. According to PG&E, the utility
that provides electricity to 16 million people in northern and central
California, that state will need 100,000 public Level 2 chargers in
its service territory by 2025, to support the 1.5 million EVs that Governor
Jerry Brown wants in the state. More

State
Senator Bill Monning goes up against Big Soda

SACRAMENTO — State Sen. Bill Monning doesn't want to ban Big Gulps,
but he announced legislation Thursday to make sure they come with a
stern warning.

Monning, a Carmel Democrat who for years pushed for a tax on sugar-sweetened
beverages, unveiled a new approach: He wants sodas and other sugary
drinks to come with labels rivaling those on cigarettes and alcohol,
warning consumers that their drinks are dangerous.

"That is not in dispute. That is science. That is hard evidence,"
Monning said. "What we seek to do is make that information more present
to the consuming public, a consumer 'right to know,' if you will."

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, sugar-sweetened
beverages are the leading cause of added sugars in the diets among American
youth and have been linked to obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular and
dental disease. More

MARTINEZ -- The California Highway Patrol officer accused of stealing
nude photos from a DUI suspect's phone told investigators that he and
his fellow officers have been trading such images for years, in a practice
that stretches from its Los Angeles office to his own Dublin station,
according to court documents obtained by this newspaper Friday.

CHP Officer Sean Harrington, 35, of Martinez, also confessed to stealing
explicit photos from the cellphone of a second Contra Costa County DUI
suspect in August and forwarding those images to at least two CHP colleagues.
The five-year CHP veteran called it a "game" among officers, according
to an Oct. 14 search warrant affidavit.

Harrington told investigators he had done the same thing to female
arrestees a "half dozen times in the last several years," according
to the court records, which included leering text messages between Harrington
and his Dublin CHP colleague, Officer Robert Hazelwood. Contra Costa
County prosecutors are investigating and say the conduct of the officers
-- none of whom has been charged so far -- could compromise any criminal
cases in which they are witnesses. CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow said
in a statement that his agency too has "active and open investigations"
and cited a similar case several years ago in Los Angeles involving
a pair of officers. More

California
Issues 76K Drivers Licenses To Undocumented Immigrants

The California Department of Motor Vehicles said it has issued 76,000
driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants since a new state law extending
legal driving privileges took effect in January, according to a report
by a TV station in the state’s capitol.

California, which has one of the nation’s largest populations of undocumented
immigrants at 2.6 million, became the 10th state to allow formerly undocumented
immigrants to drive legally. The KCRA-TV report said more than 452,000
undocumented immigrants had applied for a license in January. The numbers
reflect ongoing efforts by some federal and state officials to push
people who came into the country illegally out of the shadows without
the threat of deportation. More

Man
Scooped up by Garbage Truck Survives Ride

A man is lucky to be alive after surviving a ride in the rear of a garbage
truck that was on its way to the Yolo County Landfill.

According to Yolo County Sheriff’s Lt. Martin Torres, a man looking
for his wallet inside a garbage bin in the North Highlands of Sacramento
area got stuck in the Atlas trash truck when it made its pick-up Tuesday
afternoon.

Torres said in his 27 years of work he hasn’t heard of similar incidents.

“The man said he was stuck in the truck for about an hour, but estimates
show it was more like 3 or 3 1/2 hours,” Torres said. “The truck made
several other pick-ups before arriving at the landfill, where the driver
saw the man crawl out of his trash pile.” More

The
Most Important New California Laws of 2015

New year, new rules.

More than 900 new laws are hitting the books in 2015. Here’s our annual
list of the most important and/or interesting, as picked by KQED news,
science, health, and politics and government editors. For a more detailed
look at health laws, check out KQED’s State of Health blog.

Driver’s licenses for undocumented immigrants (AB60) Californians
who do not have proper immigration documentation will be eligible to
apply for driver’s licenses. The Department of Motor Vehicles expects
1.4 million immigrants to apply in the first few years, and law enforcement,
community groups and others are preparing for the surge. More

Los
Angeles poverty rate greater than California, nation

The new five-year estimates from the American Community Survey show
a quarter of all children in Los Angeles County live in poverty. Of
those residents who were born in another country, 20 percent live in
poverty.

"It’s not like this is new," said Christopher Thornberg with Beacon
Economics.

"This is an ongoing situation. As to why, well it’s because of the
fact that we are home to many low-skill immigrants, many who are undocumented,
people who are, if you will, living on the economic margins of society."

The county's poverty rate is greater than the state, which is at 16
percent, and the nation, at 15 percent. L.A. City Councilman Curren
Price represents one of the poorest area of the city. He believes there
are a variety of factors that contribute to the poverty rate in Los
Angeles County.More

Orinda:
District says 2nd grader can stay after all

ORINDA -- After a torrent of community outrage over its move to investigate
the residency claims of a Latina student and then kick her out of second
grade, the school district here has reversed course and will allow the
girl to stay, the family learned Friday.

Vivian and her mother, Maria, reside on the second floor of an Orinda
house owned by the Storch family, who employ Maria as a live-in nanny.

A Bay Area News Group story on Thursday detailed the district's use
of a private investigator to develop a case for disqualifying the girl
from attending school, provoking a flood of calls, emails and social
media posts in support of the family. On Friday, the Orinda Union School
District's attorney told Miriam Storch in an email that Vivian could
stay -- as long as Storch and her husband become her official caregivers,
which they are willing to do. More

Charles
Manson gets marriage license

CORCORAN, Calif. — Mass murderer Charles Manson plans to marry a 26-year-old
woman who left her Midwestern home and spent the past nine years trying
to help exonerate him. Afton Elaine Burton, the raven-haired bride-to-be,
said she loves the man convicted in the notorious murders of seven people,
including pregnant actress Sharon Tate.

No date has been set, but a wedding coordinator has been assigned
by the prison to handle the nuptials, and the couple has until early
February to get married before they would have to reapply.

The Kings County marriage license was issued Nov. 7 for the 80-year-old
Manson and Burton, who lives in Corcoran — the site of the prison —
and maintains several websites advocating his innocence. More

Pot's
Continued Status as a Schedule I Drug Is Now Up to a Calif. Judge

Although by now Judge Kimberly Mueller of the Eastern District of California
has heard all of the expert testimony she will take to make her decision
whether cannabis constitutionally belongs in Schedule I of the federal
Controlled Substances Act, she will not make her decision until both
sides have had an opportunity to argue the question through exhaustive
briefs, a process which could take more than two months.

So far, a firm deadline for written arguments has not been set, but
Judge Mueller scheduled a “status hearing” to follow up with the parties’
progress for November 19th at 9 am. If the parties haven’t hit any snags
by that time, she will probably set a final deadline for briefings on
that date.

What she may rule is anyone’s guess. She did a good job of keeping
her poker face up throughout the length of the proceedings, and her
rulings on evidentiary motions don’t reveal any clear pattern of bias
toward one party or another. More

California
on the Brink: 14 Rural Communities are Now Facing Total Water Depletion

Nestled in the mountains of California, is the infamous tourist destination
of Bodie. Once a thriving gold mining town, it is now an empty shell
of its former self.

As soon as the gold depleted in the early 20th century, the town faced
decades of decline that it would never recover from.

By the early 1960?s, the last handful of residents left the town.
They leaving behind an eerie scene, filled with crumbling homes and
businesses amidst a desolate landscape. However, gold isn’t essential
to living. If the Western drought continues on its current course, then
we have dozens of ghost towns to look forward to in the near future.

So far the drought in California has been relentless. Where I live
in the Bay Area, we’ve had our first rain of the year today, if you
could call it that. More like a fine mist. Normally we’ve gotten at
least one rainy day by this time of year, but it’s looking like this
winter is going to be just as bad as last year. More

Cyber
breaches put 18.5 million Californians' data at risk in 2013

Cyber intrusions and other data breaches put the personal records of
18.5 million Californians, nearly half the state's population, at risk
in 2013, a seven-fold increase over the year before, the state attorney
general reported on Tuesday.

The number of data breaches reported by companies and government entities
increased 28 percent, from 131 in 2012 to 167 last year, more than half
of them, or 53 percent, caused by cyber incursions such as computer
hacking and malware, the report said.

The physical loss or theft of laptops and other devices containing
unencrypted personal information accounted for 26 percent of the reported
breaches last year, while the rest stemmed from unintentional errors
and deliberate misuse. More

Despite
California climate law, carbon emissions may be a shell game

California's pioneering climate-change law has a long reach, but that
doesn't mean all its mandates will help stave off global warming.

To meet the requirement that it cut carbon emissions, for example,
Southern California Edison recently sold its stake in one of the West's
largest coal-fired power plants, located hundreds of miles out of state.

But the Four Corners Generating Station in New Mexico still burns
coal — only the power that Edison once delivered to California now goes
to a different utility's customers in Arizona. Similar swaps are taking
place at coal plants throughout the West, and they underscore the limitations
California faces as it tries to confront climate change in the absence
of a coherent federal plan. More

I
Went to California's Post-Apocalyptic Beach Town

The
Salton Sea, California's largest lake by volume, exists entirely by
accident.

It was created in the early 1900s after a heavy rain caused the Colorado
River to burst through the banks of an irrigation canal, sending millions
of gallons of water into a previously dried out lake bed in the California
desert.

Initially, the new, giant, inland sea was a blessing. In the 50s and
60s, it was a booming tourist attraction. Marketed as a "miracle in
the desert," it became Palm Springs but with beaches. It would regularly
attract over half a million visitors annually.

Yacht clubs sprang up on the shores, people flocked to fish and waterski,
and stars like the Beach Boys and Sonny Bono would visit to drive speedboats
and swim.

Property was so in demand that real estate agents would fly people
up in light aircraft and sell them property from the air without ever
landing to view it.

But it wouldn't last. The sea quickly became something of an ecological
nightmare soup. More

School
district in California now has a military-grade ARMORED TRUCK just like
the ones US soldiers ride to combat in Afghanistan

The second-largest school district in California is raising eyebrows
after its police force recently acquired a military-grade armored vehicle.

The San Diego Unified School District now has a 14-ton M-RAP — short
for mine-resistant ambush protected vehicle — that American soldiers
in Iraq and Afghanistan usually ride into combat to protect them against
explosives.

The $700,000 tank was donated to the school district under a military
program that distributes surplus military equipment to local police
agencies.

The federal initiative has come under heavy criticism after police
in Ferguson, Missouri, used military weapons usually reserved for trained
US Marines against regular citizens protesting the shooting of unarmed
black teenager Michael Brown, 18. More

How
Cops and Hackers Could Abuse California’s New Phone Kill-Switch Law

Beginning next year, if you buy a cell phone in California that gets
lost or stolen, you’ll have a built-in ability to remotely deactivate
the phone under a new “kill switch” feature being mandated by California
law—but the feature will make it easier for police and others to disable
the phone as well, raising concerns among civil liberties groups about
possible abuse.

The law, which takes effect next July, requires all phones sold in
California to come pre-equipped with a software “kill switch” that allows
owners to essentially render them useless if they’re lost or stolen.
Although the law, SB 962, applies only to California, it undoubtedly
will affect other states, which often follow the Golden State’s lead.
It also seems unlikely phone manufacturers would exclude the feature
from phones sold elsewhere. And although the legislation allows users
to opt out of the feature after they buy the phone, few likely will
do so. More

According to the Los Angeles Times, while introducing Mexican President
Enrique Peña Nieto, who said America is "the other Mexico," Brown "spoke
about the interwoven histories of Mexico and California." He "nodded
to the immigrants in the room, saying it didn't matter if they had permission
to be in the United States."

"You're all welcome in California," Brown reportedly said.

Brown has made California a sanctuary state by signing the Trust Act
and giving driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. He has also expanded
financial aid to illegal immigrants by signing the California DREAM
Act. Peña Nieto reportedly "thanked state officials for embracing foreigners,
citing measures that extend state benefits to immigrants."

Even during the border crisis, Brown reportedly vowed "to find ways
to shorten long waits at the Tijuana-San Diego international border
crossing," saying, "If we can put a man on the moon, we can put a man
from Mexico to California in 20 minutes." More

Too
much sex in sex education book, Fremont parents say

FREMONT -- A health textbook that talks about masturbation, foreplay
and erotic touch, among other sexual education topics, will stay even
though some parents are objecting to it on the grounds it's inappropriate
for their ninth grade children.

The school board voted 3-2 on June 25 to purchase copies of "Your
Health Today" for $204,600 after an extensive review process that included
input from teachers and parents, said school board President Lara Calvert-York.
It was chosen over six other books under consideration and the district
has no plans to pull it from classrooms, she said.

But that approval process the book went through hasn't dulled the
fury of parents who say the book's information on sex is way too advanced.
A petition on the website Care2 has over 1,500 online signatures calling
for the book's removal. More

Demand
for Groundwater Causing Huge Swaths of Land to Sink

Extensive groundwater pumping is causing a huge swath of central California
to sink, in some spots at an alarming rate, the U.S. Geological Survey
reports.

With California in the throes of a major drought and demand for groundwater
rising, officials and landowners are racing to respond to the process
known as subsidence. Some areas of the San Joaquin Valley, the backbone
of California's vast agricultural industry, are subsiding at the fastest
rates ever measured, said Michelle Sneed, a U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist
and lead author of the recent report.

While the bulk of the sinking 1,200-square-mile (3,108-square-kilometer)
area in central California is subsiding only about an inch (2.5 centimeters)
a year, one 2-square-mile (5-square-kilometer) area Sneed studied is
subsiding almost a foot (0.3 meters) annually. At that pace, "lots of
infrastructure can't handle such rapid subsidence," Sneed said, including
roads, water canals, and pipelines. The drought is likely to exacerbate
the situation, as less rain drives more pumping. More

As California’s severe drought deepens and officials look to reduce
water consumption in every possible way, the state appears to be sending
mixed signals as to which water-related activity is the most egregious.

The entirety of California is currently experiencing drought conditions
and more than 80 percent of the state is classified as an extreme drought.
Laura Whitney and her husband, Michael Korte, have been trying to conserve
water in their Glendora, California home by cutting back on lawn watering,
taking shorter showers, and doing larger loads of laundry. Now, they
are facing a fine of up to $500 for not keeping their lawn green.

Survey results from the State Water Resources Control Board found
that instead of achieving the 20 percent water reduction sought by Gov.
Jerry Brown, water use actually jumped one percent this May, compared
to the same period in previous years. As a result, the board voted unanimously
this week to impose the first mandatory water restrictions on California
residents. The regulations seek to curb water use among urban residents
by banning wasteful outdoor watering, such as over-watering lawns, hosing
down sidewalks or driveways, and washing cars without a shut-off nozzle
on the hose. Violators could face a fine of up to $500. More

The
Reason California Will Break Apart in the Years Ahead

A Silicon Valley venture capitalist by the name of Tim Draper, has proposed
that perhaps it is time for the various regions of California to part
ways.

His goal, is to let California be divided into six different states.

This isn’t exactly a new idea.

There have been proposals to divide the massive state since California
achieved statehood.

Of course, none have succeeded. As a matter of fact, there have only
been a handful of times in American history, when part of a state has
managed to secede to form its own state, and none of them have occurred
since the Civil War. More

California's
Absurd Intervention Over Dorm Room Sex

With all the other drama in the news, the likely passage of a California
law ostensibly targeting sexual assault on college campuses—approved
by the state Senate on May 29 and by the Assembly Judiciary Committee
on June 18—has gone largely unnoticed. Yet the bill, SB-967, deserves
attention as an alarming example of creeping Big-Sisterism that seeks
to legislate "correct" sex. While its reach affects only college students
so far, the precedent is a dangerous and potentially far-reaching one.

The bill, sponsored by state Senator Kevin De Leon (D-Los Angeles)
and developed in collaboration with student activists, does nothing
less than attempt to mandate the proper way to engage in sexual intimacy,
at least if you're on a college campus. It requires schools that receive
any state funds through student aid to use "affirmative consent" as
the standard in evaluating sexual assault complaints in the campus disciplinary
system. More

California
protesters block transport of undocumented immigrants

Anti-immigration protesters impeded the arrival of several buses transporting
undocumented immigrants into a US Border Patrol station in Murrieta,
California on Tuesday, some 60 miles north of San Diego.

The arrival of the group of Central American families had been decried
by Murrieta’s mayor, Alan Long, who alleged that the group of immigrants,
adults with their children numbering about 140 people, represented a
public safety threat to the community.

Assembled protesters, who numbered 150, converged on a street leading
up to an access road into the processing center, preventing the two
buses from reaching the facility, reported Reuters. More

Study
finds medical pot farms draining streams dry

SAN FRANCISCO -- Some drought-stricken rivers and streams in Northern
California's coastal forests are being polluted and sucked dry by water-guzzling
medical marijuana farms, wildlife officials say - an issue that has
spurred at least one county to try to outlaw personal grows.

State fish and wildlife officials say much of the marijuana being grown
in northern counties under the state's medical pot law is not being
used for legal, personal use, but for sale both in California and states
where pot is still illegal.

This demand is fueling backyard and larger-scale pot farming, especially
in remote Lake, Humboldt and Mendocino counties on the densely forested
North Coast, officials said. More

Local,
federal authorities at odds over holding some immigrant inmates

More than a dozen California counties have stopped honoring requests
from immigration agents to hold potentially deportable inmates beyond
the length of their jail terms, saying the practice may expose local
sheriffs to liability.

In recent weeks, officials in counties including Los Angeles, San
Diego, Riverside and San Bernardino have stopped complying with so-called
ICE detainers, citing a federal court ruling in April that found an
Oregon county liable for damages after it held an inmate beyond her
release date so she could be transferred into Immigration and Customs
Enforcement custody.

The California counties are among about 100 municipalities across the
country that have stopped the practice since the ruling, according to
the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, an advocacy group that is tracking
the issue. More

DMV
Lays Out Rules Governing Self-Driving Car Tests

SACRAMENTO – The Department of Motor Vehicles announced Tuesday it has
created rules governing how self-driving or autonomous cars are tested
by manufacturers on California roads.

These new rules could open the door for more of these types of vehicles
finding their way into local neighborhoods.

The rules cover vehicle testing, insurance, registration and reporting,
according to a statement issued by the DMV on Tuesday. Under the rules,
manufacturers must provide proof the vehicle being tested was successfully
tested under controlled conditions.

And anyone who gets behind the wheel of one of one of these vehicles
must first complete a training program. Rules state that while the vehicle
is moving, the driver must be in the driver’s seat and be able to take
over, if needed. The manufacturer must have a $5 million insurance or
surety bond. And any incident involving an accident or an incident where
the driverless technology disengages has to be immediately reported
to the DMV. More

San
Francisco Sign Hacked, Warns of "Godzilla Attack"

Someone hacked into an electronic traffic sign on Van Ness Avenue in
San Francisco Wednesday, posting alerts that said "Godzilla Attack"
and "Turn Back."

Ali Wunderman spotted the signs just after 9 p.m. and took pictures.
At first she thought it was a PR campaign for the new Godzilla movie.

Paul Indelicato of Pacific Highway Rentals told SFGate that the digital
signs were set up in order to warn drivers about street delays for the
Bay to Breakers race on Sunday.

"It kind of fits with the theme," he said. "We kind of smiled at each
other when we got the phone call this morning.” More

California's
medical prison beset by waste and mismanagement

FRENCH CAMP, Calif. —California's $840-million medical prison — the largest in
the nation — was built to provide care to more than 1,800 inmates.

When
fully operational, it was supposed to help the state's prison system emerge from
a decade of federal oversight brought on by the persistent neglect and poor medical
treatment of inmates.

But since opening in July, the state-of-the-art California
Health Care Facility has been beset by waste, mismanagement and miscommunication
between the prison and medical staffs.

Prisoner-rights lawyer Rebecca Evenson,
touring the facility in January to check on compliance with disabled access laws,
said she was shocked by the extent of the problems. More

Cali
state senator arrested for alleged gun-running was gun-control advocate

California state Sen. Leland Yee (D) was arrested Wednesday at his home in San
Francisco and accused of — among many, many other things — offering to procure
some seriously illegal weapons. The irony: Yee was one of the driving forces behind
some of the toughest gun-control legislation in the country during his tenure
in the state Senate.

First, a bit on Yee’s record: The former San Francisco
School Board president, who received a PhD in child psychology from the University
of Hawaii and was the first Chinese American to serve in the California Senate,
wrote legislation in 2012 that would have banned the sales of conversion kits
that would allow gun owners to create firearms with detachable magazines or bigger
clips.

This year, Yee introduced two more gun-control bills. One, S.B.
108, would have required the Justice Department to study local safe storage ordinances
that prevent children from getting access to their parents’ weapons.

Another,
S.B. 47, would have expanded California’s ban on assault weapons to include semiautomatics,
centerfire rifles or pistols with the ability to accept detachable magazines.
More

Unvaccinated
People Make Up Large Portion Of Measles Cases In California

But as more people choose not to get vaccinated,
vulnerability increases.

People most likely to get measles are either
too young to be vaccinated, or part of a small percentage of people for whom the
vaccine is ineffective.

Measles has been identified in eight California
counties so far, mostly located on the coast.

Fourteen of the measles cases
reported this year are among unvaccinated adults or kids whose parents received
a personal belief exemption. More

Don't
give up on the bullet train, California

Who doesn't love a train? Who cannot fail to be seduced by the most appealing
vehicle in human history — the rail-induced sensuality of "Brief Encounter," the
desperate heroism of engineer Casey Jones, the creative muscle of the Big Four
railroad barons, the plucky fortitude of Thomas the Tank Engine and the Little
Engine That Could, all wrapped up in gleaming, rocking steel, punctuated by a
high, lonesome whistle?

And yet California voters have been expressing
morning-after regrets since they voted for Proposition 1A, which promised them
a bullet train from Los Angeles to San Francisco. Backers said a Concorde-like
fuselage would rocket us to the Bay Area in 21/2 hours and for the low, low fare
of $55. A Disneyland ride for grown-ups! And did we mention that it's carbon-friendly?
More

Marianne
Williamson Aims to Save Washington's Soul

Marianne Williamson doesn't like most articles about her. She seems to remember
every slight, every snarky subhead that called her a shaman, a prophet, an ex–lounge
singer.

"The press creates a caricature," she says. Take, for example,
the most recent headline from The New York Times: "Marianne Williamson, New-Age
Guru, Seeks Congressional Seat."

" 'New Age guru,' " Williamson scoffs.
"First of all, what is the suggestion here, that the 'old age' is working?"

Williamson is sitting on a wooden bench beside her press person, Ileana Wachtel,
inside a vegan/organic/raw food café in Santa Monica called Rawvolution. "I've
never worn a velvet scarf in my life. You label somebody 'New Age,' and that's
automatic mockery: 'She cannot possibly be a serious thinker.' " More

California
drought: communities at risk of running dry

It is a bleak roadmap of the deepening crisis brought on by one of California's
worst droughts - a list of 17 communities and water districts that within 100
days could run dry of the state's most precious commodity.

The threatened
towns and districts, identified this week by state health officials, are mostly
small and in rural areas. They get their water in a variety of ways, from reservoirs
to wells to rivers. But, in all cases, a largely rainless winter has left their
supplies near empty.

In the Bay Area, Cloverdale and Healdsburg in Sonoma
County are among those at risk of running out of water, according to the state.
The small Lompico Water District in the Santa Cruz Mountains is also on the list.
Others could be added if the dry weather lingers. More

Tim
Draper proposes splitting California into six states

Secessionists in California's rural, northernmost reaches may have found a kindred
spirit in the Bay Area.

Tim Draper, the Silicon Valley venture capitalist,
is proposing to split California into six states, according to an initiative filing
received by the state Friday.

He'd let the northern counties have their
state of Jefferson, while adding North California, Central California, Silicon
Valley, West California and South California.

Draper did not immediately
return a telephone call for comment Friday, and the website Six Californias offers
little information about his idea.

The website TechCrunch quoted Draper
as saying a divided state would receive improved representation in the U.S. Senate
while allowing each new state to "start fresh" with government. More

California
Begins Confiscating Legally-Purchased Guns

It is not surprising that the first police raids to take legally-purchased firearms
from citizens are in California.

Until recently, the state had the strictest
gun control laws and the liberal run state government has always looked unfavorably
on the Second Amendment.

Earlier this year, the state legislature expanded
the list of what they call “prohibited persons” – people who have legally registered
a firearm but, for various reasons, are no longer allowed their Second Amendment
rights.

These reasons were expanded to include people who are behind on
state taxes, did not pay toll fees in a “timely” manner and a wide range of other
minor misdemeanors or reported mental health concerns. More

California’s
new laws: What changes in 2014

Bills that crossed Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk in 2013 encompassed policy topics from
bullets to bike safety. In some cases Brown signed legislation that enshrined
key Democratic goals, reflecting the strength of robust Democratic majorities
in both houses of the Legislature.

A few of those bills, including one
hiking the state minimum wage and one requiring cars to stay at least 3 feet away
from bicyclists, won’t take effect for a few months. But that still leaves plenty
of substantial measures that become operative state law today. Here’s a look at
some highlights.

SB 4 seeks to regulate hydraulic fracturing, or
“fracking,” a gas-harvesting practice that involves blasting a mix of pressurized
water and chemicals underground. Rules taking effect at the start of 2014 mandate
groundwater monitoring, require neighbors to be notified of new wells and have
energy companies publicly disclose the fracking chemicals they use.

AB
1266 allows transgender students to use the school facilities and join school
teams aligned with their gender. A referendum challenge could stall or ultimately
repeal the law; county registrars are in the process of verifying signatures.

SB 606 brought movie stars Halle Berry and Jennifer Garner to Sacramento,
where they testified for a measure barring photographers from aggressively seeking
shots of kids. More

San
Francisco couple pulls off their nude wedding

A few minutes after noon Thursday, Gypsy Taub stepped through the gilded doors
of San Francisco City Hall like any other nervous bride in her gown and veil.

Her intent was to be married naked on the steps and a phalanx of uniformed sheriff's
deputies stood to her side like groomsmen.

Right away, Taub noticed a hitch
in her plan.

The band was late, and that was her greatest expense. She
was not going to start without them so she grabbed a bullhorn and turned the gathering
into a political rally for the cause of freedom, while straying into topics of
wars, stolen elections and reincarnation.

"The other news for today is
that death is not real," she announced, to get the attention of the crowd of about
100 before hammering her main message. "This is a protest against the nudity ban
as much as it is a wedding. I know that the people of San Francisco are behind
me."

The wedding was the culmination of a yearlong assault on the city's
ban on public nudity, as led by Taub, a former stripper turned activist. More

It
Is Now Illegal To Smoke In Your Own Home In San Rafael, California

In a unanimous decision, members of the San Rafael City Council have approved
the strictest type of smoking ordinance in the country. Effective last week, Assembly
Bill 746 bans residents of apartments, condos, duplexes, and multi-family houses
from smoking cigarettes and “tobacco products” inside their homes.

Introduced
by Assembly Member Marc Levine and pushed by the Smoke-Free Marin Coalition for
over seven years, the ordinance applies to owners and renters in all buildings
that house wall-sharing units for three or more families. The purpose is to prevent
second-hand smoke from travelling through doors, windows, floorboards, crawl spaces,
or ventilation systems (i.e. any conceivable opening) into neighboring units.
More

Floating
island of rubbish three times size of BRITAIN floating towards California

A floating island of debris three times the size of BRITAIN is heading for the
California coastline sparking huge environmental concerns.

Five millions
tons of rubbish made up of devastated homes, boats, cars and businesses is making
its way across the Pacific Ocean following the 2011 tsunami in Japan.

Scientists
have already discovered debris on the west coast but their latest findings suggest
California is expected to be hit with a deluge all at once. America’s National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released their latest findings showing
a huge island of rubbish floating northeast of the Hawaiian Islands.

Boffins
have been unable to say for certain when the debris will wash ashore but they
have been closely monitoring its movements which stretches from Alaska to the
Philippines. Seven months ago, the first documented debris from the tsunami reached
Crescent City, California. More

California
resident: ‘I was all for Obamacare’ until I got the bill

California residents are rebelling a bit against Obamacare, with thousands shocked
by the sticker price and rethinking their support, saying that what seemed wonderful
in principle is not translating so well into reality.

As Pam Kehaly, the
president of Anthem Blue Cross in California, reported, she received a letter
from one woman who saw her insurance rates rise by 50 percent due to Obamacare.

“She said, ‘I was all for Obamacare until I found out I was paying for it,’ ”
Ms. Kehaly said, in the Los Angeles Times.

Several hundred thousand other
Californians in coming weeks may be feeling the same pinch, as insurers drop their
plans and push them onto exchanges, medical analysts say. More

What’s
Going on in California? Third Rare Creature Washes Ashore

The third rare creature washed ashore on a California beach on Friday. This time,
it was a 13.5 foot long oarfish carcass at Oceanside Harbor.

Sightings
of oarfishes are rare because the fish dive more than 3,000 feet deep. Samples
are going to be taken to see how the fish died. The oarfish discovery follows
a larger, 18-foot long oarfish carcass washing ashore on Santa Catalina Island.

“We’ve never seen a fish this big,” Mark Waddington, senior captain of the Tole
Mour, Catalina Island Marine Institute’s sail training ship, told the AP. “The
last oarfish we saw was three feet long.”

SAN FRANCISCO -- A federal appeals court in San Francisco refused to block a California
law Tuesday that bans the possession and sale of shark fins that are detached
from shark bodies.

Two Asian-American groups claim the law, which went
fully into effect on July 1, discriminates against Chinese Americans because it
prevents them from engaging in the traditional cultural practice of eating shark
fin soup at ceremonial occasions. A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals upheld a decision in which U.S. District Judge Phyllis Hamilton
of Oakland declined to issue a preliminary injunction suspending the ban.

The appeals court said the two groups "presented no persuasive evidence indicating
that the California Legislature's real intent was to discriminate against Chinese
Americans rather than to accomplish the law's stated humanitarian, conservationist
and health goals." More

E-cigarettes
have cities, businesses pondering action

Saturday was supposed to be a big day for Billy DePalma.

He envisioned
a ribbon cutting and then a steady stream of new customers perusing colorful,
pen-shaped electronic cigarettes behind glass cases. They'd gawk at his impressive
selection of liquid nicotine — flavors like Hubba Bubba Grape, Gummy Bear and
Orange Cream Soda — as he fielded questions about the fast-growing trend of "vaping,"
so-called because users inhale the vapor produced when the liquid is heated.

Instead, drywall litters the floor of his dark shop. And all he can do is wait.
Days before his shop was to open, Seal Beach passed a 45-day moratorium halting
any new e-cigarette and smoke shops from opening in the small beach community.

Seal Beach is one of a growing number of California cities now grappling with
what to do about the booming storefront businesses. More

In
Battle Over Malibu Beaches, an App Unlocks Access

MALIBU, Calif. — The battle between Malibu beachfront homeowners and a less privileged
public that wants to share the stunning coastline has been fought with padlocks,
gates, menacing signs, security guards, lawsuits and bulldozers. There seems little
question who is winning: 20 of the 27 miles of Malibu coastline are inaccessible
to the public..

Yet this month, the homeowners — including some of the
wealthiest and most famous people in the country, but also a hearty colony of
surfers, stoners and old-fashioned beach lovers — are confronting what may be
the biggest threat to their privacy yet.

SAN FRANCISCO -- A federal appeals court ruled Friday that California can keep
in place its ban on the sale of foie gras.

In doing so, the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals signaled that a lawsuit filed by foie gras producers seeking
to invalidate the California law was on its last legs. The appeals court said
the producers of the delicacy - the fatty liver of a force-fed goose or duck -
"failed to raise a serious question that they are likely to succeed on the merits"
of the lawsuit. The producers wanted the appeals court to lift the ban while their
lawsuit is under consideration in a Los Angeles federal court.

The three-judge
appeals panel rejected the producers' arguments that the ban illegally interferes
with commerce and is too vaguely worded, among other claims, indicating the court's
doubts about the underlying lawsuit in the process. More

Ex-porn
star Sandra Scream's new role: Irvine mom

The single mother sat down on her couch, taking a rare break. She showed off her
child's finger paintings.

"Isn't she quite talented?" Zorena Dombrowski
said of the colorful creations of 3-year-old Ashley, who was playing in the park
with her nanny - another pristine morning in suburbia.

Dombrowski, her
house filled with Disney toys, kiddie furniture and a 100-pound German shepherd
named Oskar, reached for a small photo album. The floral cover sharply contrasted
with the graphic pictures inside.

"These were taken by the director on
the set," Dombrowski said of the Polaroids from the early 1990s, when she was
famously known as Sandra Scream — one of the hottest names in the porn biz.

Tech companies in the Bay area such as Facebook and LinkedIn have gone public
and made their early employees wealthy. Increasingly, the young, rich employees
are spending their fortunes on prostitution.

CNNMoney's Laurie Segall interviewed
sex workers in the Bay area, as well as local authorities. All of them said prostitution
was on the rise and technology is powering it. It has increased the list of clients,
and it's making the prostitution business more efficient.

Segall says they're from "a number of major tech companies
in the area, places where the IPO money has been flowing." More

California
man faces 13 years in jail for scribbling anti-bank messages in chalk

Jeff Olson, the 40-year-old man who is being prosecuted for scrawling anti-megabank
messages on sidewalks in water-soluble chalk last year now faces a 13-year jail
sentence. A judge has barred his attorney from mentioning freedom of speech during
trial.

According to the San Diego Reader, which reported on Tuesday that
a judge had opted to prevent Olson’s attorney from "mentioning the First Amendment,
free speech, free expression, public forum, expressive conduct, or political speech
during the trial,” Olson must now stand trial for on 13 counts of vandalism.

In addition to possibly spending years in jail, Olson will also be held liable
for fines of up to $13,000 over the anti-big-bank slogans that were left using
washable children's chalk on a sidewalk outside of three San Diego, California
branches of Bank of America, the massive conglomerate that received $45 billion
in interest-free loans from the US government in 2008-2009 in a bid to keep it
solvent after bad bets went south. More

CHP:
Man arrested, cited for highway mule incident

A 65-year-old man was arrested just south of the Butler Bridge on Wednesday after
allegedly walking three, fully-packed mules on the fast-lane shoulder of Highway
29, the California Highway Patrol reported.

Wednesday afternoon, authorities
responded to reports that a man was walking mules on the northbound shoulder of
Highway 29 toward the Butler Bridge, which has no shoulder, the CHP said. When
officers arrived, the man allegedly became irate and was arrested on suspicion
of resisting arrest, a misdemeanor, and not obeying traffic signs, an infraction.

John Sears was booked into the Napa jail at 3:30 p.m. on the charges, according
to the booking report. A city of residence was not listed for the suspect, only
California. More

Los
Angeles Celebrates Independence Day with Random Bag Inspections

LOS ANGELES — Over 1,300 law enforcement and homeland security personnel participated
in a counter-terrorism drill in downtown Los Angeles.

Operation Independence
is a two-day, high-visibility training exercise that is “all about keeping L.A.
safe,” according to Nicole Nishida of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Sheriff’s deputies – accompanied by explosive-sniffing dogs – will have a more
visible presence at Union Station to perform random bag inspections, according
to Nishida.

Transportation Security Administration personnel were also
seen participating in the drill.

Holidays are always a high-profile time
for terrorism, but there were no substantiated or credible threats ahead of the
Fourth of July holiday. More

Fake
Shark Warning Signs Posted in California

Shark Warning signs started popping up at popular beaches in Santa Cruz and Capitola
Thursday.

But they are fake, according to state park rangers. It wasn't
clear who posted the signs or why.

The bottom of the notice gave a possible
clue. It told surfers to "surf Cowells instead."

Cowells is on Santa Cruz's
west side; Pleasure Point, where the signs were posted, is on the east side. Apparently
in the surfing world, those two surf spots have a long time rivalry. It could
also have been an attempt to get the some of the surfers to leave Pleasure Point
and head to Cowell.

It didn't work. Surfers breezed past the signs for
the morning surf Thursday. More

Last week, the state of California claimed that its version of Obamacare’s health
insurance exchange would actually reduce premiums. “These rates are way below
the worst-case gloom-and-doom scenarios we have heard,” boasted Peter Lee, executive
director of the California exchange. But the data that Lee released tells a different
story: Obamacare, in fact, will increase individual-market premiums in California
by as much as 146 percent.

One of the most serious flaws with Obamacare
is that its blizzard of regulations and mandates drives up the cost of insurance
for people who buy it on their own.

This problem will be especially acute
when the law’s main provisions kick in on January 1, 2014, leading many to worry
about health insurance “rate shock.” More

Cali
utility to retire troubled San Onofre nuclear plant

The troubled San Onofre nuclear power plant on the California coast is closing
after an epic 16-month battle over whether the twin reactors could be safely restarted
with millions of people living nearby, officials announced Friday.

Operator
Southern California Edison said in a statement it will retire the twin reactors
because of uncertainty about the future of the plant, which faced a tangle of
regulatory hurdles, investigations and mounting political opposition. With the
reactors idle, the company has spent more than $500 million on repairs and replacement
power.

San Onofre could power 1.4 million homes. California officials have
said they would be able to make it through the summer without the plant but warned
that wildfires or another disruption in distribution could cause power shortages.
More

Amid
bolt problems, new Bay Bridge span's opening date still unclear

Transportation officials said Wednesday that they need until at least May 29 to
decide on possibly delaying the planned September opening of the new eastern span
of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, as they address problems with broken
and suspect bolts.

California Transportation Commission Executive Director
Andre Boutros told an Oakland meeting of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission
that a steel "saddle" had been selected to replace the function of broken bolts
made in 2008 and used to secure seismic "shear keys" on the east pier of the suspension
span.

The saddle was deemed cheaper, easier to manufacture and less likely
to damage the pier than an alternate "collar" design. The fix will involve installation
of steel tendons that will be placed under tension and covered with concrete.
Boutros estimated costs at $5 million to $10 million. But officials could not
commit to the retrofit's completion in time for the planned Labor Day opening.
More